NAME Time::C - Convenient time manipulation. VERSION version 0.016 SYNOPSIS use Time::C; my $t = Time::C->from_string('2016-09-23T04:28:30Z'); # 2016-01-01T04:28:30Z $t->month = $t->day = 1; # 2016-01-01T00:00:00Z $t->hour = $t->minute = $t->second = 0; # 2016-02-04T00:00:00Z $t->month += 1; $t->day += 3; # 2016-03-03T00:00:00Z $t->day += 28; # print all days of the week (2016-02-29T00:00:00Z to 2016-03-06T00:00:00Z) $t->day_of_week = 1; do { say $t } while ($t->day_of_week++ < 7); DESCRIPTION Makes manipulating time structures more convenient. Internally uses Time::Moment, Time::Piece and Time::Zone::Olson. CONSTRUCTORS new my $t = Time::C->new(); my $t = Time::C->new($year); my $t = Time::C->new($year, $month); my $t = Time::C->new($year, $month, $day); my $t = Time::C->new($year, $month, $day, $hour); my $t = Time::C->new($year, $month, $day, $hour, $minute); my $t = Time::C->new($year, $month, $day, $hour, $minute, $second); my $t = Time::C->new($year, $month, $day, $hour, $minute, $second, $tz); Creates a Time::C object for the specified time, or the current time if no $year is specified. $year This is the year. If not specified, new() will call now_utc(). The year is 1-based and starts with year 1 corresponding to 1 AD. Legal values are in the range 1-9999. $month This is the month. If not specified it defaults to 1. The month is 1-based and starts with month 1 corresponding to January. Legal values are in the range 1-12. $day This is the day of the month. If not specified it defaults to 1. The day is 1-based and starts with day 1 being the first day of the month. Legal values are in the range 1-31. $hour This is the hour. If not specified it defaults to 0. The hour is 0-based and starts with hour 0 corresponding to midnight. Legal values are in the range 0-23. $minute This is the minute. If not specified it defaults to 0. The minute is 0-based and starts with minute 0 being the first minute of the hour. Legal values are in the range 0-59. $second This is the second. If not specified it defaults to 0. The second is 0-based and starts with second 0 being the first second of the minute. Legal values are in the range 0-59. $tz This is the timezone specification such as Europe/Stockholm or UTC. If not specified it defaults to UTC. mktime my $t = Time::C->mktime( epoch => epoch, second => $second, minute => $minute, hour => $hour, mday => $mday, month => $month, wday => $wday, week => $week, yday => $yday, year => $year, tz => $tz, offset => $offset, ); Creates a Time::C object for the specified arguments. All the arguments are optional, as long as there is at least one way to specify some kind of time with them. If there is no date specified, it will default to today's date. If there is no timezone or offset specified, it will default to UTC. If there is a date, but no time specified, it will default to midnight. epoch => $epoch If the $epoch is specified, it overrides all the other options but $tz and $offset, and this basically becomes a call to Time::C->gmtime($epoch);, applying the $tz or $offset afterwards. second => $second $second sets the second of the day/hour/minute, depending on what other options were specified. minute => $minute $minute sets the minute of the day/hour, depending on what other options were specified. hour => $hour $hour sets the hour of the day. mday => $mday $mday sets the day of the month, if a $month was specified. month => $month $month sets the month of the year. If no $mday is specified, it will default to the 1st day of the month. wday => $wday $wday sets the day of the week, if a $week was specified and no $month was specified. week => $week $week sets the week of the year if no $month was specified. If no $wday was specified, it will default to the 1st day of the week, i.e. Monday. yday => $yday $yday sets the day of the year if neither $month or $week was specified. year => $year $year specifies the year, and if no $month, $week, or $yday is specified, the day will default to January 1st. tz => $tz $tz specifies the timezone, and will default to UTC if neither $tz or $offset is given. offset => $offset $offset specifies the offset from UTC in minutes, and will default to 0 if neither $tz nor $offset are given. localtime my $t = Time::C->localtime($epoch); my $t = Time::C->localtime($epoch, $tz); Creates a Time::C object for the specified $epoch and optional $tz. $epoch This is the time in seconds since the system epoch, usually 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. $tz This is the timezone specification, such as Europe/Stockholm or UTC. If not specified defaults to the timezone specified in $ENV{TZ}, or UTC if that is unspecified. gmtime my $t = Time::C->gmtime($epoch); Creates a Time::C object for the specified $epoch. The timezone will be UTC. $epoch This is the time in seconds since the system epoch, usually 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. now my $t = Time::C->now(); my $t = Time::C->now($tz); Creates a Time::C object for the current epoch in the timezone specified in $tz or $ENV{TZ} or UTC if the first two are unspecified. $tz This is the timezone specification, such as Europe/Stockholm or UTC. If not specified defaults to the timezone specified in $ENV{TZ}, or UTC if that is unspecified. now_utc my $t = Time::C->now_utc(); Creates a Time::C object for the current epoch in UTC. from_string my $t = Time::C->from_string($str); my $t = Time::C->from_string($str, format => $format); my $t = Time::C->from_string($str, format => $format, locale => $locale); my $t = Time::C->from_string($str, format => $format, locale => $locale, strict => $strict); my $t = Time::C->from_string($str, format => $format, locale => $locale, strict => $strict, tz => $tz); Creates a Time::C object for the specified $str, using the optional $format to parse it, and the optional $tz to set an unambigous timezone, if it matches the offset the parsing operation gave. $str This is the string that will be parsed by either "strptime" in Time::P or "from_string" in Time::Moment. format => $format If specified, will be passed to "strptime" in Time::P for parsing. Otherwise, "from_string" in Time::Moment will be used. locale => $locale If strptime is used for parsing, it will be given the specified $locale. Defaults to C. strict => $strict If strptime is used for parsing, it will be given the specified $strict. Defaults to 1. tz => $tz If there is no valid timezone specified in the format, but $tz is given and matches the offset, then $tz will be set as the timezone. If it doesn't match, and there was no valid timezone specified in the format, a generic timezone matching the offset will be set, such as UTC for an offset of 0. This variable will also default to UTC. strptime my $t = Time::C->strptime($str, $format); my $t = Time::C->strptime($str, $format, locale => $locale); my $t = Time::C->strptime($str, $format, locale => $locale, strict => $strict); Creates a Time::C object for the specified $str using the $format to parse it with "strptime" in Time::P. $str This is the string that will be parsed by "strptime" in Time::P. $format This is the format that "strptime" in Time::P will be given. locale => $locale Gives the $locale parameter to "strptime" in Time::P. Defaults to C. strict => $strict Gives the $strict parameter to "strptime" in Time::P. Defaults to 1. ACCESSORS These accessors will work as LVALUEs, meaning you can assign to them to change the time being represented. Note that an assignment expression will return the computed value rather than the assigned value. This means that in the expression my $wday = $t->day_of_week = 8; the value assigned to $wday will be 1 because the value returned from the day_of_week assignment wraps around after 7, and in fact starts the subsequent week. Similarly in the expression my $mday = $t->month(2)->day_of_month = 30; the value assigned to $mday will be either 1 or 2 depending on if it's a leap year or not, and the month will have changed to 3. epoch my $epoch = $t->epoch; $t->epoch = $epoch; $t->epoch += 3600; $t->epoch++; $t->epoch--; $t = $t->epoch($new_epoch); Returns or sets the epoch, i.e. the number of seconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. If the form $t->epoch($new_epoch) is used, it likewise changes the epoch but returns the entire object. tz my $tz = $t->tz; $t->tz = $tz; $t = $t->tz($new_tz); $t = $t->tz($new_tz, $override); Returns or sets the timezone. If the timezone can't be recognised it dies. If the form $t->tz($new_tz) is used, it likewise changes the timezone but returns the entire object. If $override is a true value, it changes the $t->epoch as well, so that the date/time remains the same, but in a new timezone. offset my $offset = $t->offset; $t->offset = $offset; $t->offset += 60; $t = $t->offset($new_offset); Returns or sets the current offset in minutes. If the offset is set, it tries to find a generic Etc/GMT+X or +XX:XX timezone that matches the offset and updates the tz to this. If it fails, it dies with an error. If the form $t->offset($new_offset) is used, it likewise sets the timezone from $new_offset but returns the entire object. tm my $tm = $t->tm; $t->tm = $tm; $t = $t->tm($new_tm); Returns a Time::Moment object for the current epoch and offset. On setting, it changes the current epoch. If the form $t->tm($new_tm) is used, it likewise changes the current epoch but returns the entire object. string my $str = $t->string; my $str = $t->string(format => $format); my $str = $t->string(format => $format, locale => $locale); $t->string = $str; $t->string(format => $format) = $str; $t->string(format => $format, locale => $locale) = $str; $t->string(format => $format, strict => $strict) = $str; $t->string(format => $format, locale => $locale, strict => $strict) = $str; $t = $t->string($new_str, format => $format); $t = $t->string($new_str, format => $format, locale => $locale); $t = $t->string($new_str, format => $format, strict => $strict); $t = $t->string($new_str, format => $format, locale => $locale, strict => $strict); Renders the current time to a string using the optional strftime $format. If the $format is not given it defaults to undef. When setting this value, it tries to parse the string using "strptime" in Time::P with the $format, $locale, and $strict settings, or "from_string" in Time::Moment if no $format was given. If the format specifies a timezone, it will be updated if it is valid. If not, it checks if the detected offset matches the current tz, and if so, the tz is kept, otherwise it will get changed to a generic tz in the form of Etc/GMT+X or +XX:XX. If the form $t->string($new_str) is used, it likewise updates the epoch and timezone but returns the entire object. Note: this will not always round-trip for any given $format currently, as the implementations of "strftime" in Time::Piece and "strptime" in Time::P have some differences, especially where locales and timezones are concerned. $new_str If specified, it will update the object by parsing the $new_str with "strptime" in Time::P if a $format was passed, or "from_string" in Time::Moment otherwise. format => $format If specified, will be passed to "strptime" in Time::P for parsing, or "strftime" in Time::Piece for formatting. locale => $locale If strptime is used for parsing, it will be given the specified $locale. Defaults to C. strict => $strict If strptime is used for parsing, it will be given the specified $strict. Defaults to 1. strftime Functions exactly like string. year my $year = $t->year; $t->year = $year; $t->year += 10; $t->year++; $t->year--; $t = $t->year($new_year); Returns or sets the current year, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->year($new_year) is used, it likewise sets the current year but returns the entire object. The year is 1-based where the year 1 corresponds to 1 AD. Legal values are in the range 1-9999. quarter my $quarter = $t->quarter; $t->quarter = $quarter; $t->quarter += 4; $t->quarter++; $t->quarter--; $t = $t->quarter($new_quarter); Returns or sets the current quarter of the year, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->quarter($new_quarter) is used, it likewise sets the current quarter but returns the entire object. The quarter is 1-based where quarter 1 is the first three months of the year. Legal values are in the range 1-4. month my $month = $t->month; $t->month = $month; $t->month += 12; $t->month++; $t->month--; $t = $t->month($new_month); Returns or sets the current month of the year, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->month($new_month) is used, it likewise sets the month but returns the entire object. The month is 1-based where month 1 is January. Legal values are in the range 1-12. week my $week = $t->week; $t->week = $week; $t->week += 4; $t->week++; $t->week--; $t = $t->week($new_week); Returns or sets the current week or the year, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->week($new_week) is used, it likewise sets the current week but returns the entire object. The week is 1-based where week 1 is the first week of the year according to ISO 8601. The first week may actually have some days in the previous year, and the last week may have some days in the subsequent year. Legal values are in the range 1-53. day my $day = $t->day; $t->day = $day; $t->day += 31; $t->day++; $t->day--; $t = $t->day($new_day); Returns or sets the current day of the month, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->day($new_day) is used, it likewise sets the current day of the month but returns the entire object. The day is 1-based where day 1 is the first day of the month. Legal values are in the range 1-31. day_of_month Functions exactly like day. day_of_year my $yday = $t->day_of_year; $t->day_of_year = $yday; $t->day_of_year += 365; $t->day_of_year++; $t->day_of_year--; $t = $t->day_of_year($new_day); Returns or sets the current day of the year, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->day_of_year($new_day) is used, it likewise sets the current day of the year but returns the entire object. The day is 1-based where day 1 is the first day of the year. Legal values are in the range 1-366. day_of_quarter my $qday = $t->day_of_quarter; $t->day_of_quarter = $qday; $t->day_of_quarter += 90; $t->day_of_quarter++; $t->day_of_quarter--; $t = $t->day_of_quarter($new_day); Returns or sets the current day of the quarter, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->day_of_quarter($new_day) is used, it likewise sets the current day of the quarter but returns the entire object. The day is 1-based where day 1 is the first day in the first month of the quarter. Legal values are in the range 1-92. day_of_week my $wday = $t->day_of_week; $t->day_of_week = $wday; $t->day_of_week += 7; $t->day_of_week++; $t->day_of_week--; $t = $t->day_of_week($new_day); Returns or sets the current day of the week, updating the epoch accordingly. This module uses Time::Moment which counts days in the week starting from 1 with Monday, and ending on 7 with Sunday. If the form $t->day_of_week($new_day) is used, it likewise sets the current day of the week but returns the entire object. The day is 1-based where day 1 is Monday. Legal values are in the range 1-7. hour my $hour = $t->hour; $t->hour = $hour; $t->hour += 24; $t->hour++; $t->hour--; $t = $t->hour($new_hour); Returns or sets the current hour of the day, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->hour($new_hour) is used, it likewise sets the current hour but returns the entire object. The hour is 0-based where hour 0 is midnight. Legal values are in the range 0-23. minute my $minute = $t->minute; $t->minute = $minute; $t->minute += 60; $t->minute++; $t->minute--; $t = $t->minute($new_minute); Returns or sets the current minute of the hour, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->minute($new_minute) is used, it likewise sets the current minute but returns the entire object. The minute is 0-based where minute 0 is the first minute of the hour. Legal values are in the range 0-59. second my $second = $t->second; $t->second = $second; $t->second += 60; $t->second++; $t->second--; $t = $t->second($new_second); Returns or sets the current second of the minute, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->second($new_second) is used, it likewise sets the current second but returns the entire object. The second is 0-based where second 0 is the first second of the minute. Legal values are in the range 0-59. second_of_day my $second = $t->second_of_day; $t->second_of_day = $second; $t->second_of_day += 86400; $t->second_of_day++; $t->second_of_day--; $t = $t->second_of_day($new_second); Returns or sets the current second of the day, updating the epoch accordingly. If the form $t->second_of_day($new_second) is used, it likewise sets the current second but returns the entire object. The second is 0-based where second 0 is the first second of the day. Legal values are in the range 0-86399. METHODS diff my $d = $t1->diff($t2); my $d = $t1->diff($epoch); Creates a Time::D object from $t1 and $t2 or $epoch. It accepts either an arbitrary object that has an ->epoch accessor returning an epoch, or a straight epoch. clone my $t2 = $t1->clone(); Returns a copy of $t1. SEE ALSO Time::D Like Time::C but for durations. Time::R If you need Time::C times to recurr at regular intervals. Time::P For parsing times from strings. Time::Moment This implements most of the logic of this module. Time::Piece For parsing times from strings using an strptime format. Time::Zone::Olson Interfaces with the Olson timezone database. AUTHOR Andreas Guldstrand COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is Copyright (c) 2016 by Andreas Guldstrand. This is free software, licensed under: The MIT (X11) License