NAME
DateTimeX::Auto - use DateTime without needing to call constructors
SYNOPSIS
use DateTimeX::Auto -auto;
my $ga_start = '2000-04-06' + 'P10Y';
printf("%s %s\n", $ga_start, ref $ga_start); # 2010-04-06 DateTime
{
no DateTimeX::Auto;
my $string = '2000-04-06';
printf( "%s\n", ref($string) ? 'Ref' : 'NoRef' ); # NoRef
}
DESCRIPTION
DateTime is awesome, but constructing DateTime
objects can be annoying. You often need to use one of the formatter modules, or call DateTime->new()
with a bunch of values. If you've got a bunch of constant dates in your code, then DateTimeX::Auto
makes all this a bit simpler.
It uses overload to overload the q()
operator, automatically turning all string constants that match particular regular expressions into DateTime
objects. It also overloads stringification to make sure that DateTime
objects get stringified back to exactly the format they were given in.
The date formats supported are:
yyyy-mm-dd
yyyy-mm-ddZ
yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ss
yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ssZ
The optional trailing 'Z' puts the datetime into the UTC timezone. Otherwise the datetime will be in DateTime's default (floating) timezone.
Fractional seconds are also supported, to an arbitrary number of decimal places. However, as DateTime
only supports nanosecond precision, any digits after the ninth will be zeroed out.
my $dt ='1234-12-12T12:34:56.123456789123456789';
print "$dt\n"; # 1234-12-12T12:34:56.123456789000000000
Objects are blessed into the DateTimeX::Auto::DateTime
class which inherits from DateTime
. They use UNIVERSAL::ref (if installed) to masquerade as plain DateTime
objects.
print ref('2000-01-01')."\n"; # DateTime
Additionally, ISO 8601 durations are supported:
my $dt = '2000-01-01';
say( $dt + 'P4Y2M12D' ); # 2004-03-13
Durations are possibly not quite as clever at preserving the incoming string formatting.
The d
and dt
Functions
As an alternative DateTimeX::Auto
can export a function called d
. This might be useful if you'd prefer not to have every string constant in your code turned into a DateTime
.
use DateTimeX::Auto 'd';
my $dt = d('2000-01-01');
If d
is called with a string that is in an unrecognised format, it croaks. If called with no arguments, returns a DateTime
representing the current time.
An alias dt
is also available. They're exactly the same.
The dur
Function
Called with an ISO 8601 duration string, returns a DateTimeX::Auto::Duration object.
Object-Oriented Interface
This somewhat negates the purpose of the module, but it's also possible to use it without exporting anything, in the usual normal Perl object-oriented fashion:
use DateTimeX::Auto;
my $dt1 = DateTimeX::Auto::DateTime->new('2000-01-01T12:00:00.1234');
# Traditional DateTime style
my $dt2 = DateTimeX::Auto::DateTime->new(
year => 2000,
month => 2,
day => 3,
);
Called in the traditional DateTime style, throws an exception if the date isn't valid. Called in the DateTimeX::Auto::DateTime stringy style, returns undef if the date isn't in a recognised format, but throws if it's otherwise invalid (e.g. 30th of February).
There is similarly a DateTimeX::Auto::Duration class which is a similar thin wrapper around DateTime::Duration.
EXAMPLES
use DateTimeX::Auto ':auto';
my $date = '2000-01-01';
while ($date < '2000-02-01')
{
print "$date\n";
$date += 'P1D'; # add one day
}
use DateTimeX::Auto 'd';
my $date = d('2000-01-01');
while ($date < d('2000-02-01'))
{
print "$date\n";
$date += dur('P1D'); # add one day
}
SEE ALSO
DateTime, DateTime::Duration, DateTimeX::Easy.
AUTHOR
Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2011-2012, 2014 Toby Inkster
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.