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Date::Manip::Delta(3pm)        User Contributed Perl Documentation        Date::Manip::Delta(3pm)

NAME
       Date::Manip::Delta - Methods for working with deltas

SYNOPSIS
          use Date::Manip::Delta;
          $date = new Date::Manip::Delta;

DESCRIPTION
       This module contains functions useful in parsing and manipulating deltas.  As used in this
       module, the term delta refers to an amount of time elapsed.  It includes no information
       about a starting or ending time.

       There are several concepts involved in understanding the properties of a delta.

       standard and business delta
           There are two different modes for working with deltas: standard and business.  The
           mode used depends on how you treat the calendar.

           Standard deltas use the full calendar without any modifications.

           A business delta uses a calendar in the way a business might.  In a business calendar,
           anything outside of a business day is ignored.  Typically, this includes holidays and
           weekends.  In addition, the part of the day outside of business hours is also ignored,
           so a day may only run from 08:00 to 17:00 and everything outside of this is ignored.

           The length of a work day is usually not 24 hours.  It is defined by the start and end
           of the work day and is set using the config variables: WorkDayBeg and WorkDayEnd
           (WorkDay24Hr may be used to specify a 24-hour work day).  The work week is defined
           using the config variables: WorkWeekBeg and WorkWeekEnd.

           Daylight saving time are ignored with business calculations because time changes occur
           at night (usually on the weekends) outside of business hours.  This may yield
           unexpected results if the work day is defined to be 24-hours and the work week
           includes a day when a time change occurs.

       fields
           A delta consists of 7 fields: years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, and seconds,
           usually expressed as a colon-separated string.  For example:

              1:2:3:4:5:6:7

           refers to an elapsed amount of time 1 year, 2 months, 3 weeks, 4 days, 5 hours, 6
           minutes, and 7 seconds long.

       normalized
           A delta can be normalized or not. A normalized delta has values which have been
           simplified based on how a human would think of them.  As an example, the delta:

              0:0:0:0:0:10:70

           is not normalized since 70 seconds is typically thought of as 1 minute 10 seconds. The
           normalized form of this delta would be:

              0:0:0:0:0:11:10

           By default, deltas are converted to a normalized form in most functions that
           create/modify a delta, but this can be overridden.

       Types of deltas
           There are 4 type of deltas that are available.

           Exact deltas
                   The most common type (and the default in most situations) is an exact delta.
                   An exact delta is one where only fields which have exactly known lengths are
                   allowed to be non-zero.

                   For standard calculations, there are only three exactly known fields (hours,
                   minutes, and seconds).  The lengths are defined as:

                      1 hour   = 3600 seconds
                      1 minute = 60 seconds

                   Note that since a day is NOT always 24 hours (due to daylight saving time
                   changes), a day is not an exactly known field.

                   For business calculations, a day IS an exactly known field.  Since business
                   mode ignores daylight saving time, the length of the day can be calculated
                   based on the config variables listed above.  So, for example, if the work day
                   is 08:00-17:00, the length of the day is 9 hours.  The length of the week is
                   still unknown since some work weeks may have fewer days than others due to
                   holidays.

                   All fields which are not exactly known will always have zero value.

           Semi-exact deltas
                   A semi-exact delta treats the day/week fields as if they were exactly known.

                   For standard calculations, this is done by using the relationships:

                      1 day  = 24 hours
                      1 week = 7 days

                   For business calculations, it is done by treating a week as a constant length
                   (determined by the config variables listed above) ignoring holidays.  So if a
                   typical work week is Mon-Fri, the length of the week is 5 days.

                   For semi-exact deltas, the value of the year/month must be zero.

                   Although this may yield some values that are not exactly accurate around
                   daylight saving time transitions, strictly speaking, they yield results that
                   are useful in terms of how humans think of deltas.

           Approximate deltas
                   An approximate delta can have non-zero values for all fields.  When
                   normalizing the fields, the year/month fields are treated as one set using the
                   relationship

                      1 year  = 12 months

                   The remaining fields are normalized using the semi-exact relationships.

           Estimated deltas
                   The final type of delta are estimated deltas.  These are deltas where an
                   estimated length is applied to all the approximate fields.

                   For standard deltas, the additional relationship:

                      1 year = 365.2425 days

                   is used.  For business deltas, the additional relationship:

                      1 year   = X/7 * 365.2425 days

                   (where X is the number of work days in a week) is used.

                   Fractional seconds will be discarded (not rounded).

           NOTE: it is not possible to look at a delta and determine what type it is.  For
           example, a standard delta with a non-zero day value might be approximate or semi-
           exact.  The type will need to be explicitly selected, or determined by the context of
           the operation.

       signs
           Each field has a sign associated with it. For example, the delta "1 year ago" is
           written as:

              -1:0:0:0:0:0:0

           The sign of any field is optional, and if omitted, it is the same as the next higher
           field.  So, the following are identical:

              +1:2:3:4:5:6:7
              +1:+2:+3:+4:+5:+6:+7

           In a normalized delta, all fields in a set will have the same sign.  So the standard
           delta:

              0:0:+3:-2:0:0:0:0   (3 weeks -2 days)

           is not normalized.  The normalized version would be:

              0:0:+2:5:0:0:0:0    (2 weeks, 5 days)

           Since an approximate delta has two sets (the y/m set and the w/d/h/mn/s set), these
           deltas may have two signs. So, the following is a fully normalized approximate delta:

              +1:0:-3:3:1:0:0

       fractional values
           Fractional fields are allowed such as:

              1.25 days
              1.1 years

           but whenever parsing a delta with fractional fields, the delta will be normalized
           using the estimated relationships described above.  Fractional seconds will be
           discarded.

METHODS
       new
       new_config
       new_date
       new_delta
       new_recur
       base
       tz
       is_date
       is_delta
       is_recur
       config
       err Please refer to the Date::Manip::Obj documentation for these methods.

       parse
              $err = $delta->parse($string, \%opts);
              $err = $delta->parse($string [,$business] [,$no_normalize]);

           The second format is supported for backward compatibility, but is deprecated and will
           be removed in Date::Manip 7.00.  The second form is equivalent to:

              $err = $delta->parse($string, { business => $business,
                                              nonorm   => $no_normalize });

           This takes a string and parses it to see if it is a valid delta. If it is, an error
           code of 0 is returned and $delta now contains the value of the delta. Otherwise, an
           error code of 1 is returned and an error condition is set in the delta.

           Recognized options are:

              mode      : standard/business
                          to specify if it is a business delta or a standard delta
              nonorm    : 0/1
                          1 if the delta should not be normalized
              type      : exact, semi, approx, estimated

           When specifying the type, the delta given must satisfy the requirements of the type
           (i.e. no year field for an exact delta).

           A delta string is usually specified in compact notation which consists of a colon
           separated list of numbers (with optional signs):

              Examples:
                 0:0:0:0:4:3:-2
                 +4:3:-2
                 +4::3

           In compact notation, from 1 to 7 of the fields may be given.  For example D:H:MN:S may
           be given to specify only four of the fields.  No spaces may be present in the string,
           but it is allowed to omit some of the fields. For example 5::3:30 is valid. In this
           case, missing fields default to the value 0.

           The delta string may also be specified using common field abbreviations.  This is
           described below in the "ADDITIONAL DELTA NOTATIONS" section.

       input
              $str = $delta->input();

           This returns the string that was parsed to form the delta.

       set
              $err = $delta->set(\%opts);
              $err = $delta->set($field,$val [,$no_normalize]);

           The second format is supported for backward compatibility, but is deprecated and will
           be removed in Date::Manip 7.00.  The second form is equivalent to:

              $err = $delta->set( $field => $val, 'nonorm' => $no_normalize );

           This explicitly sets one or more parts of a delta.  %opts is a set of key/value pairs:

              $key     $val

              delta    [Y,M,W,D,H,MN,S]  sets the entire delta
              business [Y,M,W,D,H,MN,S]  sets the entire delta
              standard [Y,M,W,D,H,MN,S]  sets the entire delta
              y        YEAR              sets one field
              M        MONTH
              w        WEEK
              d        DAY
              h        HOUR
              m        MINUTE
              s        SECOND

              nonorm   0/1
              mode     business, standard
              type     exact, semi, estimated, approx

           An error is returned if an invalid data is passed in.

           %opts can only include a single key that affects each field (i.e. you can set delta or
           business but not both, and you cannot set both delta and y, but you CAN set both y and
           w).

           When setting the entire delta with business or standard, it flags the delta as a
           business or standard mode delta respectively. In those cases, you are not allowed to
           set the mode option.  Partial deltas are allowed (i.e. [H,MN,S]) in which case zeros
           are added for all fields not specified.

           When setting the entire delta with delta, the flag is left unchanged (unless the mode
           option is also passed in).

           Also, when setting the entire delta, signs are not carried from one field to another,
           so [-1,2,...] is equivalent to [-1,+2,...].

           By default, a delta is normalized, but setting the nonorm key to a true value will not
           do that.

           For backwards compatibility, normal can be used in place of standard, both as $field
           or as $val.  This is deprecated and will be removed in Date::Manip 7.00.

           When setting any field in the delta, the type of delta will be determined
           automatically as either exact (if only fields that are exactly known are have non-zero
           fields), semi (if only fields that are semi-exact or exact are included), or approx
           otherwise.  If the type option is set, it will be used provided it is valid (i.e. you
           cannot set it to exact if fields that are not exactly known are set).

       printf
              $out = $delta->printf($in);
              @out = $delta->printf(@in);

           This takes a string or list of strings which may contain any number of special
           formatting directives. These directives are replaced with information contained in the
           delta. Everything else in the string is returned unmodified.

           A directive always begins with '%'. They are described in the section below in the
           section "PRINTF DIRECTIVES".

       calc
           Please refer to the Date::Manip::Calc documentation for details.

       type
              $flag = $delta->type($op);

           This tests to see if a delta is of a certain type. $op can be;

              business  : returns 1 if it is a business delta
              standard  : returns 1 if it is a standard (non-business delta)

              exact     : returns 1 if it is exact
              semi      : returns 1 if it is semi-exact
              approx    : returns 1 if it is approximate
              estimated : returns 1 if it is estimated

       value
              $val = $delta->value();
              @val = $delta->value();

           This returns the value of the delta. In scalar context, it returns the printable
           string (equivalent to the printf directive '%Dt'). In list context, it returns a list
           of fields.

           An empty string/list is returned if there is no valid delta stored in $delta.

       convert
              $delta->convert($to);

           This converts a delta from one type to another.  $to can be 'exact', 'semi', or
           'approx'.  The conversion uses the approximate and estimated relationships listed
           above to convert the delta.

           For example, if the exact non-business delta $delta contains:

              0:0:0:0:44:0:0

           then the following call:

              $delta->convert('semi')

           would produce the semi-exact delta:

              0:0:0:1:20:0:0

           The result will always be normalized.

           Converting from one type to another that is less exact (i.e. exact to semi-exact or
           semi-exact to approx) is supported.  Converting the other direction is supported for
           backward compatibility, but will be removed in 7.00 because that operation is not one
           that is well defined.

           There is currently no support for converting business to non-business (or vice-versa).

       cmp
              $flag = $delta1->cmp($delta2);

           This compares two deltas (using the approximate relationships listed above) and
           returns -1, 0, or 1 which could be used to sort them by length of time.

           Both deltas must be valid, and both must be either business or non-business deltas.
           They do not need to be the same out of exact, semi-exact, and approximate.

           undef will be returned if either delta is invalid, or you try to compare a business
           and non-business delta.

ADDITIONAL DELTA NOTATIONS
       When parsing a delta, the string may be specified with the field spelled out, rather than
       using the colon separated fields.

       This expanded notation has the fields spelled out in some language specific form:

          Examples:
             +4 hours +3mn -2second
             + 4 hr 3 minutes -2
             4 hour + 3 min -2 s
             4 hr 2 s

       A field in the expanded notation has an optional sign, a number, and a string specifying
       the type of field.  If the sign is absent, it defaults to the sign of the next larger
       element.  So the following are equivalent:

          -4 hr 3 min 2 sec
          -4 hr -3 min -2 sec

       The valid strings describing each of the fields is contained in "Delta field names"
       section of the appropriate Date::Manip::Lang::<LANGUAGE> document.  Refer to the
       Date::Manip::Lang document for a list of languages.

       For example, for English, the document is Date::Manip::Lang::English and the field names
       include strings like:

          y:  y, yr, year, years
          m:  m, mon, mons, month, months
          w:  w, wk, ws, wks, week, weeks
          d:  d, day, days
          h:  h, hr, hrs, hour, hours
          mn: mn, min, mins, minute, minutes
          s:  s, sec, secs, second, seconds

       This list may not be complete.  You should refer to the language document for the full
       list.

       The "seconds" string may be omitted.  The sign, number, and string may all be separated
       from each other by any amount of whitespace. The string specifying the unit must be
       separated from a following number by whitespace or a comma, so the following example will
       NOT work:

          4hours3minutes

       At minimum, it must be expressed as:

          4hours 3minutes
          4 hours, 3 minutes

       In the the expanded format, all fields must be given in the order: Y M W D H MN S.  Any
       number of them may be omitted provided the rest remain in the correct order. Small numbers
       may be spelled out, so

          in two weeks
          in 2 weeks

       both work (but do not rely on this to work for large numbers).

       Most languages also allow a word to specify whether the delta is an amount of time after
       or before a fixed point. In English, the word "in" refers to a time after a fixed point,
       and "ago" refers to a point before a fixed point. So, the following deltas are equivalent:

         1:0:0:0:0:0:0
         in 1 year

       and the following are equivalent

         -1:0:0:0:0:0:0
         1 year ago

       The word "in" is completely ignored. The word "ago" has the affect of reversing all signs
       that appear in front of the components of the delta.  In other words, the following two
       strings are identical:

          -12 yr  6 mon ago
          +12 yr +6 mon

       (don't forget that there is an implied minus sign in front of the 6 in the first string
       because when no sign is explicitly given, it carries the previously entered sign).

       The in/ago words only apply to the expanded format, so the following is invalid:

          1:0:0 ago

       A delta may be standard (non-business) or business. By default, a delta is treated as a
       non-business delta, but this can be changed in two different ways.

       The first way to make a delta be business is to pass in the appropriate option.  For
       example:

         $delta->parse($string, { 'mode' => 'business' });
         $delta->parse($string, { 'mode' => 'standard' });

       The second way to specify whether a delta is business or non-business is to include a key
       word in the string that is parsed. If this string is included, it should not conflict with
       the value of a 'mode' option.

       Most languages include a word like "business" which can be used to specify that the
       resulting delta is a business delta or a non-business delta. Other languages have
       equivalent words. The placement of the word is not important. Also, the "business" word
       can be included with all types of deltas, and in both compact and expanded notation, so
       the following are valid and equivalent:

          in 4 hours business
          4:0:0 business
          business 0:0:0:0:4:0:0

       There are also words "exact" or "approximate" which may be included in the delta for
       backward compatibility.  However, they will be ignored.  They will be removed in
       Date::Manip 7.00.  The accuracy of delta (exact, semi-exact, approximate) will be
       determined only by what fields are present in the delta and the options passed in.  When a
       delta is parsed, it is automatically normalized, unless the 'nonorm' option is passed in.

PRINTF DIRECTIVES
       The following printf directives are replaced with information from the delta. Directives
       may be replaced by the values of a single field in the delta (i.e. the hours or weeks
       field), the value of several fields expressed in terms of one of them (i.e. the number of
       years and months expressed in terms of months), or the directive may format either the
       entire delta, or portions of it.

       Simple directives
           These are directives which print simple characters. Currently, the only one is:

              %%    Replaced by a single '%'

           As an example:

             $delta->printf('|%%|');
                => |%|

       Directives to print out a single field
           The following directive is used to print out the value of a single field. Spaces are
           included here for clarity, but are not in the actual directive.

              % [+] [pad] [width] Xv

           Here, X is one of (y,M,w,d,h,m,s). The directive will print out the value for that
           field.

           If a '+' is included immediately after the '%', a sign will always be included. By
           default, only negative values will include a sign.

           'width' and 'pad' are used to set the width of the string containing the field as well
           as how it is padded.

           'width' is any positive integer (without a sign). If 'width' is included, it sets the
           length of the output string (unless the string is already longer than that, in which
           case the 'width' is ignored).

           If 'pad' is included, it may be the character '<', '>', or '0'. It will be ignored if
           'width' is not included, or the string is already longer than 'width'.  If the
           formatted delta field is shorter than 'width', it will be padded with spaces on the
           left (if 'pad' is '<'), or right (if 'pad' is '>'), or it will be padded on the left
           (after any sign) with zeroes (if 'pad' is '0').

           In the following examples, $delta contains the delta: 1:2:3:4:5:6:7

              $delta->printf('|Month: %Mv|');
                 => |Month: 2|

              $delta->printf('|Day: %+05dv|');
                 => |Day: +0004|

              $delta->printf('|Day: %+<5dv|');
                 => |Day:    +4|

              $delta->printf('|Day: %>5sv|');
                 => |Day: 7    |

       Directives to print out several fields in terms of one of them
           The following directive is used to print out the value of several different fields,
           expressed in terms of a single field.

              % [+] [pad] [width] [.precision] XYZ

           Here, X, Y, and Z are each one of (y,M,w,d,h,m,s). The directive will print out the
           value for fields Y through Z expressed in terms of field X.

           Y must come before Z in the sequence (y,M,w,d,h,m,s) or it can be the same as Z.

           So, to print the day and hour fields in terms of seconds, use the directive:

              %sdh

           Any time all of X, Y, and Z are from a single set of fields, exact relationships are
           used.

           If the X, Y, and Z fields do not all belong to the same set of fields, approximate
           relationships are used.

           For non-business deltas, an approximate relationship is needed to link the Y/M part of
           the delta to the W/D part and a semi-approximate relationship is needed to link the
           W/D part with the H/MN/S part.  These relationships are:

              1 day    = 24 hours
              1 year   = 365.2425

           For business deltas, the approximate and semi-approximate relationships used to link
           the fields together are:

              1 week   = X    (length of business week in days)
              1 year   = X/7 * 365.2425

           For business deltas, the length of the day is defined using WorkDayStart and
           WorkDayEnd.  For non-business deltas, a day is 24 hours long (i.e. daylight saving
           time is ignored).

           If 'precision' is included, it is the number of decimal places to print. If it is not
           included, but 'width' is included, precision will be set automatically to display the
           maximum number of decimal places given 'width'.

           If 'pad' is included, it may be the character '<', '>', or '0', and is used in the
           same way as printing out a single field.

           In the following examples, $delta contains the delta: 1:2:3:4:5:6:7

              $delta->printf('|%.4Myw|');
                 => |14.6900|
                 1 year, 2 months, 3 weeks is approximately
                 14.6900 months

       Directives to print out portions of the delta
           The following directives may be used to print out some or all of a delta.

              % [+] [pad] [width] Dt
              % [+] [pad] [width] DXY

           The first directive will print out the entire delta.

           The second will print out the delta from the X to Y fields inclusive (where X and Y
           are each one of (y,M,w,d,h,m,s) and X must come before Y in the sequence).

           'pad' is optional and can be either '<' or '>' meaning to pad on the left or right
           with spaces. It defaults to '<'.

           If a '+' is included immediately following the '%', every field will have a sign
           attached. Otherwise, only the leftmost field in each set of fields will include a
           sign.

               $delta->printf('|%Dt|');
                  => |+1:2:+3:+4:5:6:7|

               $delta->printf('|%+Dyd|');
                  => |+1:+2:+3:+4|

KNOWN BUGS
       None known.

BUGS AND QUESTIONS
       Please refer to the Date::Manip::Problems documentation for information on submitting bug
       reports or questions to the author.

SEE ALSO
       Date::Manip        - main module documentation

LICENSE
       This script is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.

AUTHOR
       Sullivan Beck (sbeck AT cpan.org)

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