- from_datetimes
Creates a new set from a list of datetimes.
$dates = DateTime::Set->from_datetimes( dates => [ $dt1, $dt2, $dt3 ] );
The datetimes can be objects from class
"DateTime", or from a
"DateTime::Calendar::*" class.
"DateTime::Infinite::*"
objects are not valid set members.
- from_recurrence
Creates a new set specified via a "recurrence"
callback.
$months = DateTime::Set->from_recurrence(
span => $dt_span_this_year, # optional span
recurrence => sub {
return $_[0]->truncate( to => 'month' )->add( months => 1 )
},
);
The "span" parameter is
optional. It must be a
"DateTime::Span" object.
The span can also be specified using
"start" /
"after" and
"end" /
"before" parameters, as in the
"DateTime::Span" constructor. In this
case, if there is a "span" parameter
it will be ignored.
$months = DateTime::Set->from_recurrence(
after => $dt_now,
recurrence => sub {
return $_[0]->truncate( to => 'month' )->add( months => 1 );
},
);
The recurrence function will be passed a single parameter, a
datetime object. The parameter can be an object from class
"DateTime", or from one of the
"DateTime::Calendar::*" classes. The
parameter can also be a
"DateTime::Infinite::Future" or a
"DateTime::Infinite::Past" object.
The recurrence must return the next event after that
object. There is no guarantee as to what the returned object will be set
to, only that it will be greater than the object passed to the
recurrence.
If there are no more datetimes after the given parameter, then
the recurrence function should return
"DateTime::Infinite::Future".
It is ok to modify the parameter $_[0]
inside the recurrence function. There are no side-effects.
For example, if you wanted a recurrence that generated
datetimes in increments of 30 seconds, it would look like this:
sub every_30_seconds {
my $dt = shift;
if ( $dt->second < 30 ) {
return $dt->truncate( to => 'minute' )->add( seconds => 30 );
} else {
return $dt->truncate( to => 'minute' )->add( minutes => 1 );
}
}
Note that this recurrence takes leap seconds into account.
Consider using "truncate()" in this
manner to avoid complicated arithmetic problems!
It is also possible to create a recurrence by specifying
either or both of 'next' and 'previous' callbacks.
The callbacks can return
"DateTime::Infinite::Future" and
"DateTime::Infinite::Past" objects, in
order to define bounded recurrences. In this case, both
'next' and 'previous' callbacks must be defined:
# "monthly from $dt until forever"
my $months = DateTime::Set->from_recurrence(
next => sub {
return $dt if $_[0] < $dt;
$_[0]->truncate( to => 'month' );
$_[0]->add( months => 1 );
return $_[0];
},
previous => sub {
my $param = $_[0]->clone;
$_[0]->truncate( to => 'month' );
$_[0]->subtract( months => 1 ) if $_[0] == $param;
return $_[0] if $_[0] >= $dt;
return DateTime::Infinite::Past->new;
},
);
Bounded recurrences are easier to write using
"span" parameters. See above.
See also
"DateTime::Event::Recurrence" and the
other "DateTime::Event::*" factory
modules for generating specialized recurrences, such as sunrise and
sunset times, and holidays.
- empty_set
Creates a new empty set.
$set = DateTime::Set->empty_set;
print "empty set" unless defined $set->max;
- is_empty_set
Returns true is the set is empty; false otherwise.
print "nothing" if $set->is_empty_set;
- clone
This object method returns a replica of the given object.
"clone" is useful if you
want to apply a transformation to a set, but you want to keep the
previous value:
$set2 = $set1->clone;
$set2->add_duration( year => 1 ); # $set1 is unaltered
- add_duration( $duration )
This method adds the specified duration to every element of
the set.
$dt_dur = new DateTime::Duration( year => 1 );
$set->add_duration( $dt_dur );
The original set is modified. If you want to keep the old
values use:
$new_set = $set->clone->add_duration( $dt_dur );
- add
This method is syntactic sugar around the
"add_duration()" method.
$meetings_2004 = $meetings_2003->clone->add( years => 1 );
- subtract_duration( $duration_object )
When given a
"DateTime::Duration" object, this
method simply calls "invert()" on that
object and passes that new duration to the
"add_duration" method.
- subtract( DateTime::Duration->new parameters )
Like "add()", this is
syntactic sugar for the
"subtract_duration()" method.
- set_time_zone( $tz )
This method will attempt to apply the
"set_time_zone" method to every
datetime in the set.
- set( locale => .. )
This method can be used to change the
"locale" of a datetime set.
- start, min
- end, max
The first and last
"DateTime" in the set.
These methods may return
"undef" if the set is empty.
It is also possible that these methods may return a
"DateTime::Infinite::Past" or
"DateTime::Infinite::Future"
object.
These methods return just a copy of the actual value.
If you modify the result, the set will not be modified.
- span
Returns the total span of the set, as a
"DateTime::Span" object.
- iterator / next / previous
These methods can be used to iterate over the datetimes in a
set.
$iter = $set1->iterator;
while ( $dt = $iter->next ) {
print $dt->ymd;
}
# iterate backwards
$iter = $set1->iterator;
while ( $dt = $iter->previous ) {
print $dt->ymd;
}
The boundaries of the iterator can be limited by passing it a
"span" parameter. This should be a
"DateTime::Span" object which delimits
the iterator's boundaries. Optionally, instead of passing an object, you
can pass any parameters that would work for one of the
"DateTime::Span" class's constructors,
and an object will be created for you.
Obviously, if the span you specify is not restricted both at
the start and end, then your iterator may iterate forever, depending on
the nature of your set. User beware!
The "next()" or
"previous()" method will return
"undef" when there are no more
datetimes in the iterator.
- as_list
Returns the set elements as a list of
"DateTime" objects. Just as with the
"iterator()" method, the
"as_list()" method can be limited by a
span.
my @dt = $set->as_list( span => $span );
Applying "as_list()" to a
large recurrence set is a very expensive operation, both in CPU time and
in the memory used. If you really need to extract elements from a
large set, you can limit the set with a shorter span:
my @short_list = $large_set->as_list( span => $short_span );
For infinite sets,
"as_list()" will return
"undef". Please note that this is
explicitly not an empty list, since an empty list is a valid return
value for empty sets!
- count
Returns a count of
"DateTime" objects in the set. Just as
with the "iterator()" method, the
"count()" method can be limited by a
span.
defined( my $n = $set->count) or die "can't count";
my $n = $set->count( span => $span );
die "can't count" unless defined $n;
Applying "count()" to a
large recurrence set is a very expensive operation, both in CPU time and
in the memory used. If you really need to count elements from a
large set, you can limit the set with a shorter span:
my $count = $large_set->count( span => $short_span );
For infinite sets,
"count()" will return
"undef". Please note that this is
explicitly not a scalar zero, since a zero count is a valid return value
for empty sets!
- union
- intersection
- complement
These set operation methods can accept a
"DateTime" list, a
"DateTime::Set", a
"DateTime::Span", or a
"DateTime::SpanSet" object as an
argument.
$set = $set1->union( $set2 ); # like "OR", "insert", "both"
$set = $set1->complement( $set2 ); # like "delete", "remove"
$set = $set1->intersection( $set2 ); # like "AND", "while"
$set = $set1->complement; # like "NOT", "negate", "invert"
The "union" of a
"DateTime::Set" with a
"DateTime::Span" or a
"DateTime::SpanSet" object returns a
"DateTime::SpanSet" object.
If "complement" is called
without any arguments, then the result is a
"DateTime::SpanSet" object
representing the spans between each of the set's elements. If complement
is given an argument, then the return value is a
"DateTime::Set" object representing
the set difference between the sets.
All other operations will always return a
"DateTime::Set".
- intersects
- contains
These set operations result in a boolean value.
if ( $set1->intersects( $set2 ) ) { ... # like "touches", "interferes"
if ( $set1->contains( $dt ) ) { ... # like "is-fully-inside"
These methods can accept a
"DateTime" list, a
"DateTime::Set", a
"DateTime::Span", or a
"DateTime::SpanSet" object as an
argument.
intersects() returns 1 for true, and 0 for false. In a
few cases the algorithm can't decide if the sets intersect at all, and
intersects() will return
"undef".
- previous
- next
- current
- closest
my $dt = $set->next( $dt );
my $dt = $set->previous( $dt );
my $dt = $set->current( $dt );
my $dt = $set->closest( $dt );
These methods are used to find a set member relative to a
given datetime.
The "current()" method
returns $dt if $dt is an
event, otherwise it returns the previous event.
The "closest()" method
returns $dt if $dt is an
event, otherwise it returns the closest event (previous or next).
All of these methods may return
"undef" if there is no matching
datetime in the set.
These methods will try to set the returned value to the same
time zone as the argument, unless the argument has a 'floating' time
zone.
- map ( sub { ... } )
# example: remove the hour:minute:second information
$set = $set2->map(
sub {
return $_->truncate( to => day );
}
);
# example: postpone or antecipate events which
# match datetimes within another set
$set = $set2->map(
sub {
return $_->add( days => 1 ) while $holidays->contains( $_ );
}
);
This method is the "set" version of Perl
"map".
It evaluates a subroutine for each element of the set (locally
setting "$_" to each datetime) and returns the set composed of
the results of each such evaluation.
Like Perl "map", each element of the set may produce
zero, one, or more elements in the returned value.
Unlike Perl "map", changing "$_" does not
change the original set. This means that calling map in void context has
no effect.
The callback subroutine may be called later in the program,
due to lazy evaluation. So don't count on subroutine side-effects. For
example, a "print" inside the
subroutine may happen later than you expect.
The callback return value is expected to be within the span of
the "previous" and the
"next" element in the original set.
This is a limitation of the backtracking algorithm used in the
"Set::Infinite" library.
For example: given the set "[ 2001,
2010, 2015 ]", the callback result for the value
2010 is expected to be within the span
"[ 2001 .. 2015
]".
- grep ( sub { ... } )
# example: filter out any sundays
$set = $set2->grep(
sub {
return ( $_->day_of_week != 7 );
}
);
This method is the "set" version of Perl
"grep".
It evaluates a subroutine for each element of the set (locally
setting "$_" to each datetime) and returns the set consisting
of those elements for which the expression evaluated to true.
Unlike Perl "grep", changing "$_" does not
change the original set. This means that calling grep in void context
has no effect.
Changing "$_" does change the resulting set.
The callback subroutine may be called later in the program,
due to lazy evaluation. So don't count on subroutine side-effects. For
example, a "print" inside the
subroutine may happen later than you expect.
- iterate ( sub { ... } )
deprecated method - please use "map" or
"grep" instead.