NAME

DateTime::Event::Random - DateTime extension for creating random datetimes.

SYNOPSIS

use DateTime::Event::Random;

# Creates a random DateTime
$dt = DateTime::Event::Random->datetime;

# Creates a random DateTime in the future
$dt = DateTime::Event::Random->datetime( after => DateTime->now );

# Creates a random DateTime::Duration between 0 and 15 days
$dur = DateTime::Event::Random->duration( days => 15 );

# Creates a DateTime::Set of random dates 
# with an average density of 4 months, 
# that is, 3 events per year, with a span 
# of 2 years
my $dt_set = DateTime::Event::Random->new(
                 months => 4,   # events occur about 3 times a year
                 start =>  DateTime->new( year => 2003 ),
                 end =>    DateTime->new( year => 2005 ) ); 

print "next is ", $dt_set->next( DateTime->today )->datetime, "\n";
# output: next is 2004-02-29T22:00:51

my @days = $dt_set->as_list;
print join('; ', map{ $_->datetime } @days ) . "\n";
# output: 2003-02-16T21:08:58; 2003-02-18T01:24:13; ...

DESCRIPTION

This module provides convenience methods that let you easily create DateTime::Set, DateTime, or DateTime::Duration objects with random values.

USAGE

  • new

    Creates a DateTime::Set object that contains random events.

    my $random_set = DateTime::Event::Random->new;

    The events occur at an average of once a day, forever.

    You may give density parameters to change this. The density is specified as a duration:

    my $two_daily_set = DateTime::Event::Random->new( days => 2 );
    
    my $three_weekly_set = DateTime::Event::Random->new( weeks => 3 );
    
    my $random_set = DateTime::Event::Random->new( duration => $dur );

    If span parameters are given, then the set is bounded:

    my $rand = DateTime::Event::Random->new(
                   months => 4,   # events occur about 3 times a year
                   start =>  DateTime->new( year => 2003 ),
                   end =>    DateTime->new( year => 2005 ) );

    Note that the random values are generated on demand, which means that the values may not be repeateable between iterations. See the new_cached constructor for a solution.

    A DateTime::Set object does not allow for the repetition of values. Each element in a set is different.

    The DateTime::Set accessors (as_list, iterator/next/previous) always return sorted datetimes.

  • new_cached

    Creates a DateTime::Set object representing the set of random events.

    my $random_set = DateTime::Event::Random->new_cached;

    If a set is created with new_cached, then once an value is seen, it is cached, such that all sequences extracted from the set are equal.

    Cached sets are slower and take more memory than sets generated with the plain new constructor. They should only be used if you need unbounded sets that would be accessed many times and when you need repeatable results.

    This method accepts the same parameters as the new method.

  • datetime

    Returns a random DateTime object.

    $dt = DateTime::Event::Random->datetime;

    If a span is specified, then the returned value will be within the span:

    $dt = DateTime::Event::Random->datetime( span => $span );
    
    $dt = DateTime::Event::Random->datetime( after => DateTime->now );

    You can also specify locale and time_zone parameters, just like in DateTime->new().

  • duration

    Returns a random DateTime::Duration object.

    $dur = DateTime::Event::Random->duration;

    If a duration is specified, then the returned value will be within the duration:

    $dur = DateTime::Event::Random->duration( duration => $dur );
    
    $dur = DateTime::Event::Random->duration( days => 15 );

INTERNALS

  • _random_init

  • _random_duration

    These methods are called by DateTime::Set to generate the random datetime sequence.

    You can override these methods in order to make different random distributions. The default random distribution is "uniform".

    The internals API is not stable.

COOKBOOK

  • Make a random datetime

    use DateTime::Event::Random;
    
    my $dt = DateTime::Event::Random->datetime;
    
    print "datetime " .  $dt->datetime . "\n";
  • Make a random datetime, today

    use DateTime::Event::Random;
    
    my $dt = DateTime->today + DateTime::Event::Random->duration( days => 1 );
    
    print "datetime " .  $dt->datetime . "\n";

    This is another way to do it. It takes care of length of day problems, such as DST changes and leap seconds:

    use DateTime::Event::Random;
    
    my $dt_today = DateTime->today;
    my $dt_tomorrow = $dt_today + DateTime::Duration->new( days => 1 );
    
    my $dt = DateTime::Event::Random->datetime( 
                 start =>  $dt_today, 
                 before => $dt_tomorrow );
    
    print "datetime " .  $dt->datetime . "\n";
  • Make a random sunday

    use DateTime::Event::Random;
    
    my $dt = DateTime::Event::Random->datetime;
    $dt->truncate( to => week );
    $dt->add( days => 6 );
    
    print "datetime " . $dt->datetime . "\n";
    print "weekday " .  $dt->day_of_week . "\n";
  • Make a random friday-13th

    use DateTime::Event::Random;
    use DateTime::Event::Recurrence;
    
    my $day_13 = DateTime::Event::Recurrence->monthly( days => 13 );
    my $friday = DateTime::Event::Recurrence->weekly( days => 6 ); 
    my $friday_13 = $friday->intersection( $day_13 );
    
    my $dt = $friday_13->next( DateTime::Event::Random->datetime );
    
    print "datetime " .  $dt->datetime . "\n";
    print "weekday " .   $dt->day_of_week . "\n";
    print "month day " . $dt->day . "\n";

AUTHOR

Flavio Soibelmann Glock fglock@pucrs.br

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2004 Flavio Soibelmann Glock. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.

SEE ALSO

datetime@perl.org mailing list

DateTime Web page at http://datetime.perl.org/

DateTime and DateTime::Duration - date and time.

DateTime::Set - "sets"