NAME
MooseX::Types::DateTime::ButMaintained - DateTime related constraints and coercions for Moose
SYNOPSIS
Export Example:
use MooseX::Types::DateTime::ButMaintained qw(TimeZone);
has time_zone => (
isa => TimeZone
, is => "rw"
, coerce => 1
);
Class->new( time_zone => "Africa/Timbuktu" );
Class->new( time_zone => "CEST" );
Namespaced Example:
use MooseX::Types::DateTime::ButMaintained;
has time_zone => (
isa => 'DateTime::TimeZone'
, is => "rw"
, coerce => 1
);
Class->new( time_zone => "Africa/Timbuktu" );
CONSTRAINTS
- DateTime
-
A class type for DateTime.
- from
Num
-
Uses "from_epoch" in DateTime. Floating values will be used for subsecond percision, see DateTime for details.
- from
HashRef
-
Calls "new" in DateTime with the hash entries as arguments.
- from
- Duration
-
A class type for DateTime::Duration
- from
Num
-
Uses "new" in DateTime::Duration and passes the number as the
seconds
argument.Note that due to leap seconds, DST changes etc this may not do what you expect. For instance passing in
86400
is not always equivalent to one day, although there are that many seconds in a day. See "How Date Math is Done" in DateTime for more details. - from
HashRef
-
Calls "new" in DateTime::Duration with the hash entries as arguments.
- from
- DateTime::Locale
-
A class type for DateTime::Locale::root with the name DateTime::Locale.
- from
Str
-
The string is treated as a language tag (e.g.
en
orhe_IL
) and given to "load" in DateTime::Locale. - from Locale::Maktext
-
The
Locale::Maketext/language_tag
attribute will be used with "load" in DateTime::Locale.
- from
- DateTime::TimeZone
-
A class type for DateTime::TimeZone, this now as of 0.05 coerces from non-globally ambigious Olson abbreviations, using Olson::Abbreviations. This won't work for abbreviations like "EST" which are only unambigious if you know the locale. It will coerce from abbreviations like "CEST" though.
- from
Str
-
Treated as a time zone name or offset. See "USAGE" in DateTime::TimeZone for more details on the allowed values.
Delegates to "new" in DateTime::TimeZone with the string as the
name
argument.
- from
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Modern
Evan Carroll <me+cpan@evancarroll.com>
Yesteryear
Yuval Kogman <nothingmuch@woobling.org>
John Napiorkowski <jjn1056 at yahoo.com>
DESCRIPTION
This module packages several Moose::Util::TypeConstraints with coercions, designed to work with the DateTime suite of objects.
This module started as a fork of MooseX::Types::DateTime. This history and explaination is as follows: In Janurary 2009, I began a project to bring DateTime::Format::* stuff up to date with Moose. I created a framework that would greatly eliminate redundant code named DateTimeX::Format. This project's adoption was slowed by then (and still currently) bundeled package MooseX::Types::DateTime. MooseX::Types::DateTime was a badly packaged extention of two modules the self-titled MooseX::Types::DateTime, and another random module MooseX::Types::DateTimeX. In Februrary of the same year, I repackaged the module MooseX::Types::DateTimeX with the authors blessing into a new package, for the purpose of removing its dependenices, namely Date::Manip, from MooseX::Types::DateTime.
Unfortunately, this just added confusion. Now, as of the time of writing MooseX::Types::DateTimeX is available as a package, and it is available as a module which will be installed by MooseX::Types::DateTime. The benefit of removing the dependency on MooseX::Types::DateTime was never realized and the patch that updates the dependencies, and the build system remains in rt still as of writing.
This module is just the MooseX::Types::DateTime without the requirement on DateTimeX::Easy (which requires DateTime::Manip). As of 0.05 this module supports globally unique Olson abbreviations, and dies when they are not globally unique.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2008 Yuval Kogman. All rights reserved
This program is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Modifications (c) 2009 Evan Carroll. All rights reserved
This program is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.