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Rose::DateTime::Util(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Rose::DateTime::Util(3) |
Rose::DateTime::Util - Some simple DateTime wrapper functions.
use Rose::DateTime::Util qw(:all);
$now = parse_date('now');
$then = parse_date('12/25/2001 11pm');
print $now->day_of_week; # e.g., "Monday"
# "December 25th 2001 at 11:00:00 PM"
$date_text = format_date($then, "%B %E %Y at %t");
Rose::DateTime::Util is a thin wrapper around DateTime that provides a very
simple date parser and a few extra date formatting options.
Rose::DateTime::Util does not export any function names by default.
The 'all' tag:
use Rose::DateTime::Util qw(:all);
will cause the following function names to be imported:
format_date()
parse_date()
parse_epoch()
parse_european_date()
- error
- Returns a message describing the last error that occurred.
- european_dates [BOOL]
- Get or set a boolean flag that determines how "xx/xx/xxxx" dates
are parsed by the parse_date function. If set to a false-but-defined
value, then such dates are parsed as "mm/dd/yyyy". If set to
true, then they're parsed as "dd/mm/yyyy". If set to undef, then
the attribute resets to its initial value, which is determined as
described below.
The initial value of this attribute is chosen based on the
current locale as stored in DateTime's DefaultLocale setting. This
initial value is looked up only once. Any subsequent changes to
DateTime's DefaultLocale setting will be ignored until/unless this
attribute is reset to undef.
- time_zone [TZ]
- Get or set the default time zone. This value is passed to
DateTime->new(...) as the value of the
"time_zone" parameter when
parse_date() creates the DateTime object that it returns. The
default value is "floating".
- format_date DATETIME, FORMAT1, FORMAT2 ...
- Takes a DateTime object and a list of format strings. In list context, it
returns a list of strings with the formats interpolated. In scalar
context, it returns a single string constructed by joining all of the
list-context return values with single spaces. Examples:
# $s = 'Friday 5PM'
$s = format_date(parse_date('1/23/2004 17:00'), '%A, %I%p');
# @s = ('Friday', 5, 'PM')
@s = format_date(parse_date('1/23/2004 17:00'), '%A', '%I', '%p');
# $s = 'Friday 5 PM'
$s = format_date(parse_date('1/23/2004 17:00'), '%A', '%I', '%p');
Returns undef on failure, or if passed an undefined value for
DATETIME. An exception will be raised if the DATETIME argument is
defined, but is not a DateTime object.
The supported formats are mostly based on those supported by
DateTime's "strftime()" method.
Rose::DateTime::Util calls DateTime's
"strftime()" method when interpolating
these formats.
Note that the %t and
%F formats are not passed to
"strftime()", but are handled by
Rose::DateTime::Util instead. See the "Non-standard formats"
section below.
The "strftime()"-compatible
formats listed below have been transcribed from the DateTime
documentation for the sake of convenience, but the DateTime
documentation is the definitive source.
Using any format strings not in the
"strftime()"-compatible set will be
slightly slower.
"strftime()"-compatible
formats
- %a
The abbreviated weekday name.
- %A
The full weekday name.
- %b
The abbreviated month name.
- %B
The full month name.
- %c
The default datetime format for the object's locale.
- %C
The century number (year/100) as a 2-digit integer.
- %d
The day of the month as a decimal number (range 01 to 31).
- %D
Equivalent to %m/%d/%y. This is not a
good standard format if you have want both Americans and Europeans to
understand the date!
- %e
Like %d, the day of the month as a
decimal number, but a leading zero is replaced by a space.
- %G
The ISO 8601 year with century as a decimal number. The
4-digit year corresponding to the ISO week number (see
%V). This has the same format and value as
%y, except that if the ISO week number belongs
to the previous or next year, that year is used instead. (TZ)
- %g
Like %G, but without century, i.e.,
with a 2-digit year (00-99).
- %h
Equivalent to %b.
- %H
The hour as a decimal number using a 24-hour clock (range 00
to 23).
- %I
The hour as a decimal number using a 12-hour clock (range 01
to 12).
- %j
The day of the year as a decimal number (range 001 to
366).
- %k
The hour (24-hour clock) as a decimal number (range 0 to 23);
single digits are preceded by a blank. (See also
%H.)
- %l
The hour (12-hour clock) as a decimal number (range 1 to 12);
single digits are preceded by a blank. (See also
%I.)
- %m
The month as a decimal number (range 01 to 12).
- %M
The minute as a decimal number (range 00 to 59).
- %n
A newline character.
- %N
The fractional seconds digits. Default is 9 digits
(nanoseconds).
%3N milliseconds (3 digits)
%6N microseconds (6 digits)
%9N nanoseconds (9 digits)
- %p
Either `AM' or `PM' according to the given time value, or the
corresponding strings for the current locale. Noon is treated as `pm'
and midnight as `am'.
- %P
Like %p but in lowercase: `am' or `pm'
or a corresponding string for the current locale.
- %r
The time in a.m. or p.m. notation. In the POSIX locale this is
equivalent to `%I:%M:%S %p'.
- %R
The time in 24-hour notation (%H:%M). (SU) For a version
including the seconds, see %T below.
- %s
The number of seconds since the epoch.
- %S
The second as a decimal number (range 00 to 61).
- %T
The time in 24-hour notation (%H:%M:%S).
- %u
The day of the week as a decimal, range 1 to 7, Monday being
1. See also %w.
- %U
The week number of the current year as a decimal number, range
00 to 53, starting with the first Sunday as the first day of week 01.
See also %V and %W.
- %V
The ISO 8601:1988 week number of the current year as a decimal
number, range 01 to 53, where week 1 is the first week that has at least
4 days in the current year, and with Monday as the first day of the
week. See also %U and
%W.
- %w
The day of the week as a decimal, range 0 to 6, Sunday being
0. See also %u.
- %W
The week number of the current year as a decimal number, range
00 to 53, starting with the first Monday as the first day of week
01.
- %x
The default date format for the object's locale.
- %X
The default time format for the object's locale.
- %y
The year as a decimal number without a century (range 00 to
99).
- %Y
The year as a decimal number including the century.
- %z
The time-zone as hour offset from UTC. Required to emit
RFC822-conformant dates (using "%a, %d
%b %Y
%H:%M:%S %z").
- %Z
The time zone or name or abbreviation.
- %%
A literal `%' character.
- %{method}
Any method name may be specified using the format
"%{method}" name where
"method" is a valid DateTime object method.
Non-standard formats
- %E
Day of the month word (1st, 2nd, 3rd, ... 31st)
- %f
Month number (1, 2, 3, ... 12)
- %F
"%A, %B
%E %Y" (Wednesday,
April 4th 2001)
- %i
Hour, 12-hour (1, 2, 3, ... 12)
- %t
Time as "%l:%M:%S %p"
(1:23:45 PM)
- parse_european_date TEXT [, TIMEZONE]
- This function works the same as the parse_date function, except it forces
Eurpoean-style date parsing. In other words, this:
parse_european_date($date, $tz);
is equivalent to this:
# Save old value of the European date setting
my $save = Rose::DateTime::Util->european_dates;
# Turn European date parsing on
Rose::DateTime::Util->european_dates(1);
# Parse the date
parse_date($date, $tz);
# Restore the old European date setting
Rose::DateTime::Util->european_dates($save);
- parse_date TEXT [, TIMEZONE]
- Attempts to parse the date described by TEXT. Returns a DateTime object,
or undef on failure, with an error message available via
Rose::DateTime::Util->error().
If a DateTime object is passed in place of the TEXT argument,
it is returned as-is if there is no TIMEZONE argument, or after having
set_time_zone(TIMEZONE) called on it if there is a TIMEZONE
argument.
Since the time zone is not part of any of the supported date
string formats, parse_date() takes an optional TIMEZONE argument
which is passed to the DateTime constructor as the value of the
"time_zone" parameter. In the absence
of a TIMEZONE argument to
"parwse_date()", the time zone
defaults to the value returned by the time_zone() class method
("floating", by default)
The formats understood and their interpretations are listed
below. Square brackets are used to indicate optional portions of the
formats.
- now
- Right now. Also valid with an exclamation point: "now!"
- today
- Today, at 00:00:00.
- yyyy mm dd
- yyyy mm dd [hh? am/pm]
- yyyy mm dd [hh?:mm [am/pm]]
- yyyy mm dd [hh?:mm:ss [am/pm]]
- yyyy mm dd [hh?:mm:ss.nnnnnnnnn [am/pm]]
- Exact date and time. Also valid without spaces, with hyphens
("-"), periods ("."), or underscores ("_")
between the year, month, and day, and with a "T", hyphen,
period, or underscore between the date and time. The time is optional and
defaults to 00:00:00. The am/pm part is optional unless only the
"hh" (hours) part of the time is specified. Fractional seconds
take a maximum of 9 digits, but fewer are also acceptable.
- mm/dd/yyyy [hh[:mm[:ss[.nnnnnnnnn]]]] [am/pm]
- Exact date and time. Also valid with hyphens ("-"), periods
("."), or underscores ("_") instead of slashes
("/"), and with a "T", hyphen, period, or underscore
between the date and time. The time is optional and defaults to 00:00:00.
The am/pm part is optional. Fractional seconds take a maximum of 9 digits,
but fewer are also acceptable.
This format is only valid when european_dates is set to
false (which is the default).
- dd/mm/yyyy [hh[:mm[:ss[.nnnnnnnnn]]]] [am/pm]
- Exact date and time. Also valid with hyphens ("-"), periods
("."), or underscores ("_") instead of slashes
("/"). The time is optional and defaults to 00:00:00. The am/pm
part is optional. Fractional seconds take a maximum of 9 digits, but fewer
are also acceptable.
This format is only valid when european_dates is set to
true.
- [-]infinity
- Positive or negative infinity. Case insensitive.
- [-]dddddddddd[.nnnnnnnnn] seconds)
- A positive or negative number with optional fractional seconds is
interpreted as seconds since the Unix epoch. Fractional seconds take a
maximum of 9 digits, but fewer are also acceptable.
- parse_epoch TEXT [, TIMEZONE]
- This function is the same as parse_date except that it prefers Unix epoch
values in cases where this format conflicts with another. Example:
$arg = '19991231';
$dt = parse_date($arg); # Dec 31, 1999
$dt = parse_epoch($arg); # Aug 20, 1970
DateTime, DateTime::TimeZone
John C. Siracusa (siracusa@gmail.com)
Copyright (c) 2010 by John C. Siracusa. All rights reserved. This program is
free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms
as Perl itself.
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