NAME¶
Image::ExifTool::Shift.pl - ExifTool time shifting routines
DESCRIPTION¶
This module contains routines used by ExifTool to shift date and time values.
DETAILS¶
Time shifts are applied to standard EXIF-formatted date/time values (ie.
"2005:03:14 18:55:00"). Date-only and time-only values may also be
shifted, and an optional timezone (ie. "-05:00") is also supported.
Here are some general rules and examples to explain how shift strings are
interpreted:
Date-only values are shifted using the following formats:
'Y:M:D' - shift date by 'Y' years, 'M' months and 'D' days
'M:D' - shift months and days only
'D' - shift specified number of days
Time-only values are shifted using the following formats:
'h:m:s' - shift time by 'h' hours, 'm' minutes and 's' seconds
'h:m' - shift hours and minutes only
'h' - shift specified number of hours
Timezone shifts are specified in the following formats:
'+h:m' - shift timezone by 'h' hours and 'm' minutes
'-h:m' - negative shift of timezone hours and minutes
'+h' - shift timezone hours only
'-h' - negative shift of timezone hours only
A valid shift value consists of one or two arguments, separated by a space. If
only one is provided, it is assumed to be a time shift when applied to a
time-only or a date/time value, or a date shift when applied to a date-only
value. For example:
'7' - shift by 1 hour if applied to a time or date/time
value, or by one day if applied to a date value
'2:0' - shift 2 hours (time, date/time), or 2 months (date)
'5:0:0' - shift 5 hours (time, date/time), or 5 years (date)
'0:0:1' - shift 1 s (time, date/time), or 1 day (date)
If two arguments are given, the date shift is first, followed by the time shift:
'3:0:0 0' - shift date by 3 years
'0 15:30' - shift time by 15 hours and 30 minutes
'1:0:0 0:0:0+5:0' - shift date by 1 year and timezone by 5 hours
A date shift is simply ignored if applied to a time value or visa versa.
Numbers specified in shift fields may contain a decimal point:
'1.5' - 1 hour 30 minutes (time, date/time), or 1 day (date)
'2.5 0' - 2 days 12 hours (date/time), 12 hours (time) or
2 days (date)
And to save typing, a zero is assumed for any missing numbers:
'1::' - shift by 1 hour (time, date/time) or 1 year (date)
'26:: 0' - shift date by 26 years
'+:30 - shift timezone by 30 minutes
Below are some specific examples applied to real date and/or time values ('Dir'
is the applied shift direction: '+' is positive, '-' is negative):
Original Value Shift Dir Shifted Value
--------------------- ------- --- ---------------------
'20:30:00' '5' + '01:30:00'
'2005:01:27' '5' + '2005:02:01'
'11:54:00' '2.5 0' - '23:54:00'
'2005:11:02' '2.5 0' - '2005:10:31'
'2005:11:02 11:54:00' '2.5 0' - '2005:10:30 23:54:00'
'2004:02:28 08:00:00' '1 1.3' + '2004:02:29 09:18:00'
'07:00:00' '-5' + '07:00:00'
'07:00:00+01:00' '-5' + '07:00:00-04:00'
'07:00:00Z' '+2:30' - '07:00:00-02:30'
'1970:01:01' '35::' + '2005:01:01'
'2005:01:01' '400' + '2006:02:05'
'10:00:00.00' '::1.33' + '09:59:58.67'
NOTES¶
The format of the original date/time value is not changed when the time shift is
applied. This means that the length of the date/time string will not change,
and only the numbers in the string will be modified. The only exception to
this rule is that a 'Z' timezone is changed to '+00:00' notation if a timezone
shift is applied. A timezone will not be added to the date/time string.
TRICKY¶
This module is perhaps more complicated than it needs to be because it is
designed to be very flexible in the way time shifts are specified and
applied...
The ability to shift dates by Y years, M months, etc, is somewhat contradictory
to the goal of maintaining a constant shift for all time values when applying
a batch shift. This is because shifting by 1 month can be equivalent to
anything from 28 to 31 days, and 1 year can be 365 or 366 days, depending on
the starting date.
The inconsistency is handled by shifting the first tag found with the actual
specified shift, then calculating the equivalent time difference in seconds
for this shift and applying this difference to subsequent tags in a batch
conversion. So if it works as designed, the behaviour should be both intuitive
and mathematically correct, and the user shouldn't have to worry about details
such as this (in keeping with Perl's "do the right thing"
philosophy).
BUGS¶
This feature uses the standard time library functions, which typically are
limited to dates in the range 1970 to 2038.
AUTHOR¶
Copyright 2003-2011, Phil Harvey (phil at owl.phy.queensu.ca)
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO¶
Image::ExifTool(3pm)