Period(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Period(3)NAMETime::Period - A Perl module to deal with time periods.
SYNOPSIS
"use Time::Period;"
"$result = inPeriod($time, $period);"
DESCRIPTION
The inPeriod function determines if a given time falls within a given
period. inPeriod returns 1 if the time does fall within the given
period, 0 if not, and -1 if inPeriod detects a malformed time or
period.
The time is specified as per the "time()" function, which is assumed to
be the number of non-leap seconds since January 1, 1970.
The period is specified as a string which adheres to the format
sub-period[, sub-period...]
or the string "none" or whitespace. The string "none" is not case
sensitive.
If the period is blank, then any time period is assumed because the
time period has not been restricted. In that case, inPeriod returns 1.
If the period is "none", then no time period applies and inPeriod
returns 0.
A sub-period is of the form
scale {range [range ...]} [scale {range [range ...]}]
Scale must be one of nine different scales (or their equivalent codes):
Scale | Scale | Valid Range Values
| Code |
*******|*******|************************************************
year | yr | n where n is an integer 0<=n<=99 or n>=1970
month | mo | 1-12 or jan, feb, mar, apr, may, jun, jul,
| | aug, sep, oct, nov, dec
week | wk | 1-6
yday | yd | 1-365
mday | md | 1-31
wday | wd | 1-7 or su, mo, tu, we, th, fr, sa
hour | hr | 0-23 or 12am 1am-11am 12noon 12pm 1pm-11pm
minute | min | 0-59
second | sec | 0-59
The same scale type may be specified multiple times. Additional scales
simply extend the range defined by previous scales of the same type.
The range for a given scale must be a valid value in the form of
v
or
v-v
For the range specification v-v, if the second value is larger than the
first value, the range wraps around unless the scale specification is
year.
Year does not wrap because the year is never really reset, it just
increments. Ignoring that fact has lead to the dreaded year 2000
nightmare. When the year rolls over from 99 to 00, it has really
rolled over a century, not gone back a century. inPeriod supports the
dangerous two digit year notation because it is so rampant. However,
inPeriod converts the two digit notation to four digits by prepending
the first two digits from the current year. In the case of 99-1972,
the 99 is translated to whatever current century it is (probably 20th),
and then range 99-1972 is treated as 1972-1999. If it were the 21st
century, then the range would be 1972-2099.
Anyway, if v-v is 9-2 and the scale is month, September, October,
November, December, January, and February are the months that the range
specifies. If v-v is 2-9, then the valid months are February, March,
April, May, Jun, July, August, and September. 9-2 is the same as Sep-
Feb.
v isn't a point in time. In the context of the hour scale, 9 specifies
the time period from 9:00:00 am to 9:59:59 am. This is what most
people would call 9-10. In other words, v is discrete in its time
scale. 9 changes to 10 when 9:59:59 changes to 10:00:00, but it is 9
from 9:00:00 to 9:59:59. Just before 9:00:00, v was 8.
Note that whitespace can be anywhere and case is not important. Note
also that scales must be specified either in long form (year, month,
week, etc.) or in code form (yr, mo, wk, etc.). Scale forms may be
mixed in a period statement.
Furthermore, when using letters to specify ranges, only the first two
for week days or the first three for months are significant. January
is a valid specification for jan, and Sunday is a valid specification
for su. Sun is also valid for su.
PERIOD EXAMPLES
To specify a time period from Monday through Friday, 9am to 5pm, use a
period such as
wd {Mon-Fri} hr {9am-4pm}
When specifing a range by using -, it is best to think of - as meaning
through. It is 9am through 4pm, which is just before 5pm.
To specify a time period from Monday through Friday, 9am to 5pm on
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and 9am to 3pm on Tuesday and Thursday,
use a period such as
wd {Mon Wed Fri} hr {9am-4pm}, wd{Tue Thu} hr {9am-2pm}
To specify a time period that extends Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, but alternates
weeks in a month, use a period such as
wk {1 3 5} wd {Mon Wed Fri} hr {9am-4pm}
Or how about a period that specifies winter?
mo {Nov-Feb}
This is equivalent to the previous example:
mo {Jan-Feb Nov-Dec}
As is
mo {jan feb nov dec}
And this is too:
mo {Jan Feb}, mo {Nov Dec}
Wait! So is this:
mo {Jan Feb} mo {Nov Dec}
To specify a period that describes every other half-hour, use something
like
minute { 0-29 }
To specify the morning, use
hour { 12am-11am }
Remember, 11am is not 11:00:00am, but rather 11:00:00am - 11:59:59am.
Hmmmm, 5 second blocks could be a fun period...
sec {0-4 10-14 20-24 30-34 40-44 50-54}
To specify every first half-hour on alternating week days, and the
second half-hour the rest of the week, use the period
wd {1 3 5 7} min {0-29}, wd {2 4 6} min {30-59}
VERSION
1.20
HISTORY
Version 1.20
------------
- Added the ability to specify no time period.
Version 1.13
------------
- Cleaned up the error checking code.
Version 1.12
------------
- Updated email and web space information.
Version 1.11
------------
- Minor bug fix in 1.10.
Version 1.10
------------
- Released.
AUTHOR
Patrick Ryan <pgryan@geocities.com>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1997 Patrick Ryan. All rights reserved. This Perl
module uses the conditions given by Perl. This module may only be
distributed and or modified under the conditions given by Perl.
DATE
August 26, 1997
SOURCE
This distribution can be found at
http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lakes/8456/
or
http://www.perl.com/CPAN/modules/by-module/Time/
perl v5.10.0 1997-08-27 Period(3)