Date::Calendar - phpMan

Date::Calendar(3)     User Contributed Perl Documentation    Date::Calendar(3)
NAME
       Date::Calendar - Calendar objects for different holiday schemes
MOTTO
       There is more than one way to do it - this is just one of them!
PREFACE
       Basically, Date::Calendar is just a caching proxy class for
       Date::Calendar::Year objects, which are embedded in each Date::Calendar
       object.
       However, and in contrast to Date::Calendar::Year methods,
       Date::Calendar methods permit calculations spanning an arbitrary number
       of years, without loss of efficiency.
       So you should usually use Date::Calendar and not Date::Calendar::Year,
       since that way you don't have to worry about calculations crossing year
       boundaries.
       Note however that Date::Calendar and Date::Calendar::Year can only deal
       with years lying within the range [1583..2299].
SYNOPSIS
         use Date::Calendar::Profiles qw( $Profiles );
         use Date::Calendar;
         $calendar_US_AZ  = Date::Calendar->new( $Profiles->{'US-AZ'} [,LANG[,WEEKEND]] );
         $calendar_DE_SN  = Date::Calendar->new( $Profiles->{'DE-SN'} [,LANG[,WEEKEND]] );
         $year_2000_US_AZ = $calendar_US_AZ->year( 2000 );
         $year_2001_DE_SN = $calendar_DE_SN->year( 2001 );
         @years = $calendar->cache_keys(); # returns list of year numbers
         @years = $calendar->cache_vals(); # returns list of year objects
         $calendar->cache_clr();
         $calendar->cache_add(YEAR|DATE,...);
         $calendar->cache_del(YEAR|DATE,...);
         $index        = $calendar->date2index(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);
         @names        = $calendar->labels(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);
         @holidays     = $calendar->labels();
         $holidays     = $calendar->labels();
         @dates        = $calendar->search(PATTERN);
         $dates        = $calendar->search(PATTERN);
         $hashref      = $calendar->tags(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);
         $days         = $calendar->delta_workdays(YEAR1,MONTH1,DAY1|DATE1
                                                  ,YEAR2,MONTH2,DAY2|DATE2
                                                  ,FLAG1,FLAG2);
         ($date,$rest) = $calendar->add_delta_workdays(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE
                                                      ,DELTA);
         $date         = $calendar->add_delta_workdays(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE
                                                      ,DELTA);
         $flag         = $calendar->is_full(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);
         $flag         = $calendar->is_half(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);
         $flag         = $calendar->is_work(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);
INTERFACE
       Note that whenever a year number, a date, a time or a combined date and
       time are expected as input parameters by one of the methods of this
       class, you can always pass a Date::Calc[::Object] date object or an
       array reference (of an array of appropriate length) instead!
       See Date::Calc::Object(3) for more details.
       So instead of calling a given method like this:
         $object->method1( $year,$month,$day );
         $object->method2( $year1,$month1,$day1, $year2,$month2,$day2 );
         $object->method3( $year1, $year2, $year3 );
       You can also call it like so:
         $object->method1( $date );
         $object->method1( [1964,1,3] );
         $object->method2( $year1,$month1,$day1, $date2 );
         $object->method2( $date1, $year2,$month2,$day2 );
         $object->method2( $date1, $date2 );
         $object->method2( $year1,$month1,$day1, [2001,3,17] );
         $object->method2( [1964,1,3], $year2,$month2,$day2 );
         $object->method2( [1964,1,3], [2001,3,17] );
         $object->method2( $date1, [2001,3,17] );
         $object->method2( [1964,1,3], $date2 );
         $object->method3( $year1, $date2, [2001,3,17] );
       And similarly if a time or a combined date and time are expected.
       If you substitute an expected year number by an anonymous array (this
       is the recommended way of writing date constants, for increased
       readability of your programs), it must contain three values,
       nevertheless (otherwise the use of an anonymous array would be
       pointless).
       Don't confuse year numbers and their substitutes (a date object or an
       array reference) with Date::Calendar::Year objects, which are a totally
       different thing!
       But incidentally ":-)", you may also pass a Date::Calendar::Year object
       whenever a year number is expected. However, and perhaps against your
       expectations at times, especially in conjunction with the method
       "cache_add()", only the year number from that object will be used, not
       the year object itself (the year object in question might be using the
       wrong profile!).
       Moreover, whenever a method of this class returns a date, it does so by
       returning a Date::Calc[::Object] date object.
DESCRIPTION
       o "$calendar = Date::Calendar->new(PROFILE[,LANG[,WEEKEND]]);"
         The first argument must be the reference of a hash, which contains a
         holiday scheme or "profile" to be used in all calculations involving
         the new calendar object.
         The second argument is optional, and must consist of the valid name
         or number of a language as provided by the Date::Calc(3) module if
         given.
         After the second argument, a list of day numbers which will
         constitute the "weekend" can optionally be specified, where 1=Monday,
         2=Tuesday, 3=Wednesday, 4=Thursday, 5=Friday, 6=Saturday and
         7=Sunday.
         If no values are given, 6 and 7 (Saturday and Sunday) are
         automatically taken as default.
         If values outside of the range 1..7 are given, they will be ignored.
         This can be used to switch off this feature and to have no regularly
         recurring holidays at all when for instance a zero is given.
         See Date::Calendar::Profiles(3) and Date::Calendar::Year(3) for more
         details about these arguments and about how to roll your own calendar
         profiles.
         The method creates a new calendar object for a given profile, i.e., a
         given location and its scheme of holidays (or a scheme of your own).
         This calendar object is a caching proxy object; it stores the
         reference of the given profile and contains a hash (the cache) of
         Date::Calendar::Year objects.
       o "$year = $calendar->year(YEAR|DATE);"
         This method returns a Date::Calendar::Year object for the given year
         and the profile that was associated with the given calendar object.
         If the cache in the given calendar object already contains an object
         for the requested year, the corresponding object reference is simply
         returned.
         If not, a new Date::Calendar::Year object is created using the
         profile that has been associated with the given calendar object.  The
         new Date::Calendar::Year object is then stored in the calendar
         object's cache and its object reference is returned.
         A fatal "given year out of range" error will occur if the given year
         number lies outside the valid range of [1583..2299].
       o "@years = $calendar->cache_keys();"
         This method returns the list of YEAR NUMBERS of the
         Date::Calendar::Year objects contained in the given calendar object's
         cache.
       o "@years = $calendar->cache_vals();"
         This method returns the list of OBJECT REFERENCES of the
         Date::Calendar::Year objects contained in the given calendar object's
         cache.
       o "$calendar->cache_clr();"
         This method clears the entire cache of the given calendar object (by
         destroying the cache hash and creating a new one).
       o "$calendar->cache_add(YEAR|DATE,...);"
         Roughly, this method is a shortcut for
           for $year (@list)
           {
               $calendar->year($year);
           }
       o "$calendar->cache_del(YEAR|DATE,...);"
         This method removes the Date::Calendar::Year objects whose year
         numbers are given from the cache of the given calendar object.
         Year numbers for which the calendar object's cache doesn't contain an
         entry are simply ignored.
       o "$index = $calendar->date2index(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);"
         This method converts a given date into the number of the day in that
         year (this is sometimes also referred to as the "julian" date), i.e.,
         a number between 0 (for January 1st) and the number of days in the
         given year minus one, i.e., 364 or 365 (for December 31st).
         You may need this in order to access the bit vectors returned by the
         Date::Calendar::Year methods "vec_full()", "vec_half()" and
         "vec_work()".
         If the Date::Calendar::Year object for the given YEAR is not in the
         $calendar's cache yet, it will be created and added.
         An exception ("invalid date") is thrown if the given arguments do not
         constitute a valid date, or ("given year out of range [1583..2299]")
         if the given year lies outside of the permitted range.
       o "@names = $calendar->labels(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);"
         "@holidays = $calendar->labels();"
         "$holidays = $calendar->labels();"
         If any arguments are given, they are supposed to represent a date. In
         that case, a list of all labels (= names of holidays) associated with
         that date are returned. The first item returned is always the name of
         the day of week for that date. The corresponding year object for the
         given date's year is added to the calendar's cache first if
         necessary.
         If no arguments are given, the list of all available labels in all
         years that have previously been accessed in the given calendar (i.e.,
         the years which are already in the given calendar's cache) is
         constructed. Note that this means that the returned list will be
         empty if there are no year objects in the given calendar's cache yet
         (!). The returned list does NOT include any names of the days of week
         (which would be pointless in this case).
         Multiple labels are reported only once.
         Usually all years have the same set of labels, so it may seem
         superfluous to scan all the years in the cache instead of just one.
         But there may be exceptions, because it is possible to define
         calendar profiles which do not contain all possible holidays in every
         year. See Date::Calendar::Profiles(3) and Date::Calendar::Year(3) for
         more details.
         In list context, the resulting list itself is returned. In scalar
         context, the number of items in the resulting list is returned.
       o "@dates = $calendar->search(PATTERN);"
         "$dates = $calendar->search(PATTERN);"
         This method searches through all the labels in all years that have
         previously been accessed in the given calendar (i.e., the years which
         are already in the given calendar's cache) and returns a list of date
         objects with all dates whose labels match the given pattern.
         (Use the methods "cache_clr()", "cache_add()" and "cache_del()" in
         order to put the year numbers you want into the calendar object's
         cache, or to make sure it only contains the year numbers you want to
         search.)
         Note that this is a simple, case-insensitive substring search, NOT a
         full-fledged regular expression search!
         The result is guaranteed to be sorted chronologically.
         In scalar context, only the number of items in the resulting list is
         returned, instead of the resulting list itself (as in list context).
       o "$hashref = $calendar->tags(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);"
         This method returns a hash reference for the given calendar and date.
         The hash it refers to is a copy of the calendar profile's internal
         hash which contains the names for the given date as keys and 0, 1, 2,
         or 3 as their corresponding values meaning the following:
             0    =>    commemorative day
             1    =>    "half" holiday
             2    =>    "full" holiday
             3    =>    both a "half" and a "full" holiday
         The value "3" should only occur if a date has been redefined by the
         underlying profile using the same key (i.e., the same name) but with
         a different type of holiday.
       o "$days = $calendar->delta_workdays(YEAR1,MONTH1,DAY1,
         YEAR2,MONTH2,DAY2, FLAG1,FLAG2);"
         "$days = $calendar->delta_workdays(DATE1,DATE2,FLAG1,FLAG2);"
         This method calculates the number of work days (i.e., the number of
         days, but excluding all holidays) between two dates.
         In other words, this method is equivalent to the "Delta_Days()"
         function of the Date::Calc module, except that it disregards holidays
         in its counting.
         The two flags indicate whether the start and end dates should be
         included in the counting (that is, of course, only in case they
         aren't holidays), or not.
         It is common, for example, that you want to know how many work days
         are left between the current date and a given deadline.
         Typically, you will want to count the current date but not the
         deadline's date. So you would specify "true" ("1") for FLAG1 and
         "false" ("0") for FLAG2 in order to achieve that.
         In other words, a value of "true" means "including this date", a
         value of "false" means "excluding this date".
         As with the "Delta_Days()" function from the Date::Calc module, the
         dates have to be given in chronological order to yield a positive
         result. If the dates are reversed, the result will be negative.
         The parameter FLAG1 is associated with the first given date, the
         parameter FLAG2 with the second given date (regardless of whether the
         dates are in chronological order or not).
         An exception ("invalid date") is raised if either of the two date
         arguments does not constitute a valid date.
       o "($date,$rest) = $calendar->add_delta_workdays(YEAR,MONTH,DAY,
         DELTA);"
         "($date,$rest) = $calendar->add_delta_workdays(DATE,DELTA);"
         "$date = $calendar->add_delta_workdays(YEAR,MONTH,DAY, DELTA);"
         "$date = $calendar->add_delta_workdays(DATE,DELTA);"
         This method is the equivalent of the "Add_Delta_Days()" function from
         the Date::Calc module, except that it adds work days and skips
         holidays.
         In other words, you can add or subtract a number of work days "DELTA"
         to/from a given date and get a new date as the result (as a
         Date::Calc object).
         You add days (i.e., you go forward in time) with a positive offset
         "DELTA", and you subtract days (i.e., you go backwards in time) with
         a negative offset.
         Note that an exception ("invalid date") is raised if the given date
         argument does not constitute a valid date.
         In scalar context, the method just returns the resulting date object,
         whereas in list context the method not only returns the new date, but
         also a "rest". This rest is useful for cases in which your profile
         contains "half" holidays, or when you add or subtract fractions of a
         day.
         Sometimes it is not possible to accommodate the requested number of
         work days, and a rest remains.
         This rest can currently only assume the value "0.0" (zero), "-0.5"
         (minus one half) or "0.5" (one half), provided you use only integral
         or multiples of 0.5 as offsets. A rest of zero indicates that the
         calculation yielded an exact result. If the rest is 0.5 or -0.5, this
         is to be interpreted as "the resulting date at 12:00 o'clock",
         instead of as "the resulting date at 0:00 o'clock".
         The rest is always positive (or zero) if the offset "DELTA" is
         positive (or zero), and always negative (or zero) if the offset is
         negative (or zero).
         Example:
           #!perl
           use Date::Calendar;
           use Date::Calendar::Profiles qw( $Profiles );
           $year = shift;
           $cal = Date::Calendar->new( $Profiles->{'sdm-MUC'} );
           ($date,$rest) = $cal->add_delta_workdays($year,1,3, -3);
           $date->date_format(1);
           print "\$date = $date, \$rest = $rest.\n";
           __END__
         This program calculates "January 3rd of the given year minus 3 work
         days":
           > perl test.pl 2001
           $date = 28-Dec-2000, $rest = 0.
           > perl test.pl 2002
           $date = 28-Dec-2001, $rest = -0.5.
         Note that December 31st is a "half" holiday in 2001 for the calendar
         profile used in this example.
         You can easily verify the results above with the help of the
         "calendar.cgi" CGI script or the "linearcal.pl" script from the
         "examples" subdirectory in the Date::Calc distribution.
         BEWARE that this method may currently return unexpected (i.e.,
         contradicting the above documentation) or plain wrong results when
         going back in time (this is a bug!).
         However, it works correctly and as documented above when going
         forward in time.
       o "$flag = $calendar->is_full(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);"
         This method returns "true" ("1") if the bit corresponding to the
         given date is set in the bit vector representing "full" holidays, and
         "false" ("0") otherwise.
         I.e., the method returns "true" if the given date is a (full) holiday
         (according to the calendar profile associated with the given calendar
         object).
         The corresponding Date::Calendar::Year object is created first and
         stored in the calendar object's cache if necessary (if it's not
         already there).
         Note that you can get a reference to this bit vector (in order to use
         this bit vector in bit vector operations) as follows:
           $vec_full = $calendar->year($year)->vec_full();
         The number of bits in this bit vector is the same as the number of
         days in the given year "$year", which you can retrieve through either
         ""$days = $vec_full->Size();"" or ""$days = $year->val_days();"".
         See Date::Calendar::Year(3) and Bit::Vector(3) for more details.
       o "$flag = $calendar->is_half(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);"
         This method returns "true" ("1") if the bit corresponding to the
         given date is set in the bit vector representing "half" holidays, and
         "false" ("0") otherwise.
         I.e., the method returns "true" if the given date is a half holiday
         (according to the calendar profile associated with the given calendar
         object).
         Note that if a date is a "full" holiday, the "half" bit is never set,
         even if you try to do so in your calendar profile, on purpose or by
         accident.
         The corresponding Date::Calendar::Year object is created first and
         stored in the calendar object's cache if necessary (if it's not
         already there).
         Note that you can get a reference to this bit vector (in order to use
         this bit vector in bit vector operations) as follows:
           $vec_half = $calendar->year($year)->vec_half();
         The number of bits in this bit vector is the same as the number of
         days in the given year "$year", which you can retrieve through either
         ""$days = $vec_half->Size();"" or ""$days = $year->val_days();"".
         See Date::Calendar::Year(3) and Bit::Vector(3) for more details.
       o "$flag = $calendar->is_work(YEAR,MONTH,DAY|DATE);"
         This method returns "true" ("1") if the bit corresponding to the
         given date is set in the bit vector used to perform all sorts of
         calculations, and "false" ("0") otherwise.
         The corresponding Date::Calendar::Year object is created first and
         stored in the calendar object's cache if necessary (if it's not
         already there).
         BEWARE that the "work" in this method's name does NOT come from "work
         days"!
         It comes from the fact that the corresponding bit vector can be used
         for any "work" that you need to do. In other words, it's a "work
         space".
         Therefore, this bit vector might contain about everything you could
         imagine - including a bit pattern which marks all "work days" with
         set bits, if it so happens!
         But you better don't rely on it, unless you put the bit pattern there
         yourself in the first place.
         Note that you can get a reference to this bit vector (in order to
         fill it with any bit pattern you like) as follows:
           $vec_work = $calendar->year($year)->vec_work();
         The number of bits in this bit vector is the same as the number of
         days in the given year "$year", which you can retrieve through either
         ""$days = $vec_work->Size();"" or ""$days = $year->val_days();"".
         See Date::Calendar::Year(3) and Bit::Vector(3) for more details.
SEE ALSO
       Date::Calendar::Year(3), Date::Calendar::Profiles(3),
       Date::Calc::Object(3), Date::Calc(3), Date::Calc::Util(3),
       Bit::Vector(3).
LIMITATIONS
       The calendar profiles included in Date::Calendar::Profiles(3) usually
       do not take historical irregularities into account (even though some do
       in order to show how this can be done), they only provide means for
       calculating regularly recurring events (the profiles should therefore
       not be relied upon for historical faithfulness).
KNOWN BUGS
       The method "add_delta_workdays()" is known to produce results which are
       sometimes off by one working day when a negative offset is used. As a
       workaround, try to add one working day first and then subtract one
       working day more than initially intended. See also the file
       "examples/bug.pl" for how to do this.
VERSION
       This man page documents "Date::Calendar" version 6.4.
AUTHOR
         Steffen Beyer
         mailto:STBEY AT cpan.org
         http://www.engelschall.com/u/sb/download/
COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 2000 - 2015 by Steffen Beyer. All rights reserved.
LICENSE
       This package is free software; you can use, modify and redistribute it
       under the same terms as Perl itself, i.e., at your option, under the
       terms either of the "Artistic License" or the "GNU General Public
       License".
       The C library at the core of the module "Date::Calc::XS" can, at your
       discretion, also be used, modified and redistributed under the terms of
       the "GNU Library General Public License".
       Please refer to the files "Artistic.txt", "GNU_GPL.txt" and
       "GNU_LGPL.txt" in the "license" subdirectory of this distribution for
       any details!
DISCLAIMER
       This package is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
       WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
       See the "GNU General Public License" for more details.
perl v5.26.3                      2015-03-07                 Date::Calendar(3)