Date::Manip::Objects.3pm

Langue: en

Autres versions - même langue

Version: 2010-04-27 (fedora - 01/12/10)

Section: 3 (Bibliothèques de fonctions)

NAME

Date::Manip::Objects - A description of the various Date::Manip objects

SYNOPSIS

The Date::Manip package consist of several modules, each of which perform a set of operations on a specific type of information. This document describes how the various modules work together.

DESCRIPTION

Date::Manip consists of several different modules, each of which deal with a different type of data.

The primary modules are:

Date::Manip::Obj
The Date::Manip::Obj module is not intended for direct use. It is used as a base class for all other Date::Manip classes described below.

The Date::Manip::Obj module contains some functions which are inherited by all these classes, so to understand all of the methods available to any of the classes below, you must include those documented in the Date::Manip::Obj class.

Date::Manip::Base
The Date::Manip::Base is used to perform basic operations including basic date operations, management of configuration options, handling the definitions used in different languages, etc.

A Date::Manip::Base object does not, of itself, contain any date information. Instead, it contains configuration information which determines how the Date::Manip package performs date operations. The configuration information is documented in the Date::Manip::Config manual.

The Date::Manip::Base object has one other property that is very important. When performing basic date properties, some intermediate results are cached in the object which leads to significant performance increases in later operations. As such, it is important to reuse the object as much as possible, rather than creating new Date::Manip::Base objects all the time.

Much of the information in this document is related to this issue, and tells how to create various objects in order to get the most efficient reuse of this cached data.

Because all other objects depend on a Date::Manip::Base object, a Date::Manip::Base object is embedded in all other objects, and the same Base object can be embedded as often as desired to achieve maximum performance.

Date::Manip::TZ
The Date::Manip::TZ module adds support for time zones. It is used to verify date and time zone information, convert dates from one time zone to another, and handle all daylight saving time transitions.

All higher level objects (those listed next) depend on both a Date::Manip::Base and Date::Manip::TZ object, so one of each are embedded into those objects.

Date::Manip::Date
Date::Manip::Delta
Date::Manip::Recur
These are the primary modules which are used to perform all high level date operations.

The Date::Manip::Date class performs operations on dates (which includes a date, time, and time zone). The Date::Manip::Delta class performs operations with deltas (amounts of time). The Date::Manip::Recur class performs operations on recurring events.

As mentioned above, each of these high level classes rely on both a Date::Manip::TZ object and a Date::Manip::Base object, and one of each is embedded in each object.

A Date::Manip::Date object contains a single date, so in order to work with multiple dates, multiple Date::Manip::Date objects will need to be created. In order to make the most effective use of cached information in the Date::Manip::Base object, the same Date::Manip::Base object can be embedded in each of the higher level objects.

The same goes for multiple Date::Manip::Delta and Date::Manip::Recur objects.

WORKING WITH DATE::MANIP OBJECTS

The basic way to create the first instance of a Date::Manip object (of any class) is to use the ``new'' method of the appropriate class. This is documented in the Date::Manip::Obj manual. For example:
    $tz   = new Date::Manip::TZ;
    $date = new Date::Manip::Date;
 
 

Optionally, config options can be passed in:

    $tz   = new Date::Manip::TZ \@opts;
    $date = new Date::Manip::Date \@opt;
 
 

In order to create additional Date::Manip objects, a previously created object should be passed in as the first argument. This will allow the same Base object to be embedded in both in order to maximize data reuse of the cached intermediate results, and will result in much better performance. For example:

    $date1 = new Date::Manip::Date;
    $date2 = new Date::Manip::Date $date1;
 
 

As a general rule, you should only pass in configuration options when the first object is created. In other words, the following behavior:

     $date1 = new Date::Manip::Date [$opt1,$val1,$opt2,$val2];
     $date2 = new Date::Manip::Date $date1;
 
 

will behave differently than:

     $date1 = new Date::Manip::Date [$opt1,$val1];
     $date2 = new Date::Manip::Date $date1,[$opt2,$val2];
 
 

In the first case, only a single Date::Manip::Base object is created. In the second case, two Date::Manip::Base objects are created.

Unless you specifically need to work with multiple sets of configurations (which is described below), it is far less complicated, and results in better performance, to work with only a single Date::Manip::Base object.

It is also preferred that all configuration be done soon after the first object is created in order to keep things clear.

To following example illustrates a potential pitfall:

     $date1 = new Date::Manip::Date [$opt1,$val1];
     $date2 = new Date::Manip::Date $date1,
     $date1->config($opt2,$val2);
 
 

The first two lines create a total of 4 Date::Manip object. The first line creates a Date::Manip::Base object and a Date::Manip::TZ object, and then a Date::Manip::Date object with the first two embedded in it.

The second line creates a second Date::Manip::Date object, with the same Date::Manip::Base and Date::Manip::TZ objects embedded in it.

The third line alters the configuration information used by the $date1 object. Since configuration information is stored only in the Base object, that object is modified, and therefore, the configuration change impacts both $date1 and $date2 objects (and any additional Date::Manip objects created from either of them).

In order to keep things clean, it is highly recommended that the above example be reordered:

     $date1 = new Date::Manip::Date [$opt1,$val1];
     $date1->config($opt2,$val2);
     $date2 = new Date::Manip::Date $date1,
 
 

and all configuration changes be made immediately after (or as close to it as possible) the creation of the first object.

MULTIPLE CONFIGURATIONS

Occasionally, it may be useful to have multiple sets of configurations. In order to do this, multiple Date::Manip::Base objects must be created (each with their own set of configuration options), and then new Date::Manip objects are created with the appropriate Date::Manip::Base object embedded in them.

Possible reasons include:

Parsing multiple languages
A Date::Manip::Base object includes information about a single language. If you need to parse dates from two (or more) languages, a Date::Manip::Base object needs to be created for each one. This could be done as:
    $date_eng1 = new Date::Manip::Date ["language","English"];
    $date_spa1 = new Date::Manip::Date $date_eng1,["language","Spanish"];
 
 

Any additional Date::Manip objects created from the first will work with English. Additional objects created from the second will work in Spanish.

Business modes for different countries and/or businesses
If you are doing business mode calculations (see Date::Manip::Calc) for two different businesses which have different holiday lists, work weeks, or business days, you can create different objects which read different config files (see Date::Manip::Config) with the appropriate description of each.

The primary issue when dealing with multiple configurations is that it is necessary for the programmer to manually keep track of which Date::Manip objects work with each configuration. For example, refer to the following lines:

    $date1 = new Date::Manip::Date [$opt1,$val1];
    $date2 = new Date::Manip::Date $date1, [$opt2,$val2];
    $date3 = new Date::Manip::Date $date1;
    $date4 = new Date::Manip::Date $date2;
 
 

The first line creates 3 objects (a Date::Manip::Base object, a Date::Manip::TZ object, and a Date::Manip::Date object). The Date::Manip::Base object has the configuration set to contain the value(s) passed in as the final list reference argument.

The second line creates 3 new objects (a second Date::Manip::Base object, a second Date::Manip::TZ object, and a second Date::Manip::Date object). Since a list reference containing config variables is passed in, a new Date::Manip::Base object is created, rather than reusing the first one. The second Date::Manip::Base object contains all the config from the first, as well as the config variables passed in in the list reference argument.

The third line creates another Date::Manip::Date object which uses the first Date::Manip::Base and Date::Manip::TZ objects embedded in it.

The fourth line creates another Date::Manip::Date object which uses the second Date::Manip::Base and Date::Manip::TZ objects embedded in it.

Luckily, most of the time there will only be one set of configuration options used, so this complexity is really for a very special, and not widely used, bit of functionality.

WORKING WITH BOTH HIGH LEVEL AND LOWER LEVEL OBJECTS

If you are working with any higher level Date::Manip modules (Date::Manip::Date, Date::Manip::Delta, or Date::Manip::Recur), you probably will not need to work with the lower Date::Manip::Base and Date::Manip::TZ objects directly. However, if you want to make use of some of the faster Date::Manip::Base operations, or work directly with time zones, you can access the lower level objects using the ``base'' and ``tz'' methods from the higher level object.

More information is in the Date::Manip::Obj manual.

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@cpan.org)