This module is a simple visitor implementation for Perl values.
It has a main dispatcher method, visit, which takes a single perl
value and then calls the methods appropriate for that value.
Date::Extract takes an arbitrary block of text, searches it for
something that looks like a date string, and builds a DateTime object
out of it. By design it will produce few false positives. This means
it will not catch nearly everything that looks like a date string. So
if you have the string "do homework for class 2019" it won't return a
DateTime object with the year set to 2019.
The main idea of EzDate is that the object represents a specific date
and time. A variety of properties tells you information about that date
and time such as hour, minute, day of month, weekday, etc.
Date::ICal talks the ICal date format, and is intended to be a base
class for other date/calendar modules that know about ICal time format
also.
Date::ISO is a perl extension for converting dates between ISO and
Gregorian formats.
Date::Manip is a series of modules designed to make any common date/time
operation easy to do. Operations such as comparing two times, calculating a
time a given amount of time from another, or parsing international times are
all easily done.
This Perl module is a direct translation of Steffen Beyer's excellent
Date::Calc module to use Perl only instead of a combination of Perl and C.
This package consists of a Perl module for all kinds of date calculations
based on the Gregorian calendar (the one used in all western countries
today), thereby complying with all relevant norms and standards:
ISO/R 2015-1971, DIN 1355 and, to some extent, ISO 8601 (where applicable).
Perl interface to libev - high-performance event loop/event model with
lots of features. It is modelled (very losely) after libevent and the
Event perl module, but is faster, scales better and is more correct,
and also more featureful. And also smaller.
Quite often, when dealing with dates, we don't just want to know
information about one particular date, but about a range of dates. For
example, we may wish to know whether a given date is in a particular
range, or what the overlap is between one range and another. This module
lets you ask such questions.
This Perl module deals with Roman dates. Very useful for generating custom
headers for e-mail messages, or just to dazzle and confuse friends, relatives
and complete strangers.