Parse and format RFC3339 datetime strings
Format DateTime For RSS
DateTime::Format::RSS attempts to deal with those nasty RSS
date/time strings used in fields (such as <issued>, <modified>,
<pubDate>) that never ever seems to be right.
Make available a magic caller() which can ignore namespaces that you tell it
about.
This module allows a method to get at arguments passed to subroutines
higher up in the call stack.
This module understands the formats used by SQLite for its DATE, DATETIME, TIME,
and TIMESTAMP data types. It can be used to parse these formats in order to
create DateTime objects, and it can take a DateTime object and produce a string
representing it in the SQLite format.
This module implements most of strptime(3), the POSIX function that is the
reverse of strftime(3), for DateTime. While strftime takes a DateTime and a
pattern and returns a string, strptime takes a string and a pattern and returns
the DateTime object associated.
XML Schema defines a usage profile which is a subset of
the ISO8601 profile. This profile defines that the
following is the only possible representation for a
dateTime, despite all other options ISO provides.
This module contains some common calculation utilities
that are required to perform datetime calculations.
This module provides tracking of objects, for the purpose of detecting
memory leaks due to circular references or inappropriate caching
schemes.
Object tracking can be enabled on a per object basis or globally. Any
objects thus tracked are remembered until DESTROYed; details of any
objects left are printed out to stderr at END-time.
The main purpose of this module is to provide an easy way to build a profile
to validate a data structure. It does this by giving you a set of declarative
keywords in the importing namespace.