Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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0.25 2005-10-05
- t/15time_zone.t does it's own time zone "add_duration" handling
0.24 2005-10-03
- _recurrence.pm warned when the recurrence didn't have occurrences before
a given start date. Reported by Mark D. Anderson.
0.23 2005-10-03
- _recurrence.pm died when the recurrence didn't have occurrences before
a given start date. Reported by Mark D. Anderson.
0.22 2005-05-06
- DateTime::Set 0.21 dies when as_list is asked to produce a list from
outside the range of the set. Patch contributed by Stephen Gowing.
0.21 2005-04-06
- no hard limit in count() and as_list(); removed the warnings from the docs.
0.20 2005-02-28
- changed tests to use en_US instead of pt_BR (which changes every year)
by Dave Rolsky.
- optimized SpanSet methods for special cases:
start_set()
end_set()
contains( $dt )
intersects( $dt )
- added an example to count(), by David Nicol.
- added a note about how the result of min()/max() is just a copy of the
actual set boundary. Reported by Ron Hill.
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of Perl files to deal with the perl-5.8.7 update that moved all
pkgsrc-installed Perl files into the "vendor" directories.
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These paths are now relative to PERL5_PACKLIST_DIR, which currently
defaults to ${PERL5_SITEARCH}. There is no change to the binary
packages.
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Collection.
DateTime::Set is a module for date/time sets. It can be used to handle two
different types of sets.
The first is a fixed set of predefined datetime objects. For example, if we
wanted to create a set of dates containing the birthdays of people in our
family.
The second type of set that it can handle is one based on the idea of a
recurrence, such as "every Wednesday", or "noon on the 15th day of every
month". This type of set can have fixed starting and ending datetimes, but
neither is required. So our "every Wednesday set" could be "every Wednesday
from the beginning of time until the end of time", or "every Wednesday after
2003-03-05 until the end of time", or "every Wednesday between 2003-03-05 and
2004-01-07".
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