This module is for manipulating data as hierarchical tag/value pairs
(Structured TAGs or Simple Tree AGgreggates). These data structures can
be represented as nested arrays, which have the advantage of being
native to perl.
DateTime::Calendar::Christian is the implementation of the combined Julian and
Gregorian calendar.
See DateTime for information about most of the methods.
DateTime::Calendar::FrenchRevolutionary implements the French Revolutionary
Calendar. This module implements most methods of DateTime; see the DateTime(3)
man page for all methods.
DateTime::Calendar::Hebrew is the implementation of the Hebrew calendar. Read
on for more details on the Hebrew calendar.
The Hebrew/Jewish calendar is a Luni-Solar calendar. Torah Law mandates that
months are Lunar. The first day of a month coincides with the new moon in
Jerusalem. (In ancient times, this was determined by witnesses. Read the books
in the bibliography for more info). The Torah also mandates that certain
holidays must occur in certain seasons. Seasons are solar, so a calendar that
can work with lunar & solar events is needed.
DateTime::Calendar::Julian implements the Julian Calendar. This module
implements all methods of DateTime; see the DateTime(3) man page for all
methods.
An implementation of the Mayan Long Count, Haab, and Tzolkin calendars as
defined in "Calendrical Calculations The Millennium Edition". Supplemented by
"Frequently Asked Questions about Calendars".
DateTime::Calendar::Pataphysical is the implementation of the pataphysical
calendar. Each year in this calendar contains 13 months of 29 days. This
regularity makes this a convenient alternative for the irregular Gregorian
calendar.
QCT - Qt/PyQt based commit tool
Primary goals:
1. Platform agnostic (Linux, Windows, MacOS, Cygwin -- and FreeBSD now)
2. VCS agnostic (bazaar, cvs, git, mercurial, monotone, perforce, subversion)
3. Good keyboard navigation, keep the typical work-flow simple
DateTime::Event::Cron generated DateTime events or DateTime::Set objects based
on crontab-style entries.
The DateTime::Event::Easter module returns Easter events for DateTime objects.
From a given datetime, it can tell you the previous, the following and the
closest Easter event. The 'is' method will tell you if the given DateTime is an
Easter Event.
Easter Events can be Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, Black Saturday
and Easter Sunday. If that's not enough, the module will also accept an offset
so you can get the date for Pentecost (49 days after Easter Sunday) by passing
49.