table of contents
Data::ICal::Entry::Todo(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Data::ICal::Entry::Todo(3pm) |
NAME¶
Data::ICal::Entry::Todo - Represents a to-do entry in an iCalendar file
SYNOPSIS¶
my $vtodo = Data::ICal::Entry::Todo->new(); $vtodo->add_properties( summary => "go to sleep", status => 'INCOMPLETE', # Dat*e*::ICal is not a typo here dtstart => Date::ICal->new( epoch => time )->ical, ); $calendar->add_entry($vtodo); $vtodo->add_entry($alarm);
DESCRIPTION¶
A Data::ICal::Entry::Todo object represents a single to-do entry in an iCalendar file. (Note that the iCalendar RFC refers to entries as "components".) It is a subclass of Data::ICal::Entry and accepts all of its methods.
METHODS¶
ical_entry_type¶
Returns "VTODO", its iCalendar entry name.
mandatory_unique_properties¶
The "uid" property is mandatory if "rfc_strict" was passed to "new" in Data::ICal.
optional_unique_properties¶
According to the iCalendar standard, the following properties may be specified at most one time for a to-do item:
class completed created description dtstamp dtstart geo last-modified location organizer percent-complete priority recurrence-id sequence status summary uid url
In addition, "due" and "duration" may be specified at most once each, but not both in the same entry (though this restriction is not enforced).
Or if "vcal10 => 1":
class dcreated completed description dtstart due last-modified location rnum priority sequence status summary transp url uid
optional_repeatable_properties¶
According to the iCalendar standard, the following properties may be specified any number of times for a to-do item:
attach attendee categories comment contact exdate exrule request-status related-to resources rdate rrule
Or if "vcal10 => 1":
aalarm attach attendee categories dalarm exdate exrule malarm palarm related-to resources rdate rrule
AUTHOR¶
Best Practical Solutions, LLC <modules@bestpractical.com>
LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright (c) 2005 - 2020, Best Practical Solutions, LLC. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
2022-10-14 | perl v5.34.0 |