NAME¶
Jifty::DateTime - a DateTime subclass that knows about Jifty users
SYNOPSIS¶
use Jifty::DateTime;
# Get the current date and time
my $dt = Jifty::DateTime->now;
# Print out the pretty date (i.e., today, tomorrow, yesterday, or 2007-09-11)
Jifty->web->out( $dt->friendly_date );
# Better date parsing
my $dt_from_human = Jifty::DateTime->new_from_string("next Saturday");
DESCRIPTION¶
Jifty natively stores timestamps in the database in GMT. Dates are stored
without timezone. This class loads and parses dates and sets them into the
proper timezone.
To use this DateTime class to it's fullest ability, you'll need to add a
"time_zone" method to your application's user object class. This is
the class returned by "user_object" in Jifty::CurrentUser. It must
return a value valid for using as an argument to DateTime's
"set_time_zone()" method.
new ARGS¶
See "new" in DateTime. If we get what appears to be a date, then we
keep this in the floating datetime. Otherwise, set this object's timezone to
the current user's time zone, if the current user's user object has a method
called "time_zone".
now ARGS¶
See "now" in DateTime. If a time_zone argument is passed in, then this
wrapper is effectively a no-op.
OTHERWISE this will always set this object's timezone to the current user's
timezone. Without this, DateTime's "now" will set the timezone to
UTC always (by passing "time_zone => 'UTC'" to
"Jifty::DateTime::new". We want Jifty::DateTime to always reflect
the current user's timezone (unless otherwise requested, of course).
from_epoch ARGS¶
See "from_epoch" in DateTime and "now" in Jifty::DateTime.
This handles the common mistake of "from_epoch($epoch)" as well.
current_user [CURRENTUSER]¶
When setting the current user, update the timezone appropriately.
If an "undef" current user is passed, this method will find the
correct current user and set the time zone.
current_user_has_timezone¶
Return timezone if the current user has one. This is determined by checking to
see if the current user has a user object. If it has a user object, then it
checks to see if that user object has a "time_zone" method and uses
that to determine the value.
set_current_user_timezone [DEFAULT_TZ]¶
set_current_user_time_zone [DEFAULT_TZ]¶
Set this Jifty::DateTime's timezone to the current user's timezone. If that's
not available, then use the passed in DEFAULT_TZ (or GMT if not passed in).
Returns the Jifty::DateTime object itself.
If your subclass changes this method, please override
"set_current_user_timezone" not
"set_current_user_time_zone", since the latter is merely an alias
for the former.
new_from_string STRING[, ARGS]¶
Take some user defined string like "tomorrow" and turn it into a
"Jifty::Datetime" object. If a "time_zone" argument is
passed in, that is used for the
input time zone.
If the string appears to be a _date_, the
output time zone will be
floating. Otherwise, the
output time zone will be the current user's
time zone.
As of this writing, this uses Date::Manip along with some internal hacks to
alter the way Date::Manip normally interprets week day names. This may change
in the future.
friendly_date¶
Returns the date given by this "Jifty::DateTime" object. It will
display "today" for today, "tomorrow" for tomorrow, or
"yesterday" for yesterday. Any other date will be displayed in
"ymd" format.
We currently shift by "24 hours" to detect yesterday and tomorrow,
rather than "1 day" because of daylight saving issues. "1
day" can result in invalid local time errors.
is_date¶
Returns whether or not this "Jifty::DateTime" object represents a date
(without a specific time). Dates in Jifty are in the floating time zone and
are set to midnight.
get_tz_offset¶
Returns the offset for a time zone. If there is no current user, or the current
user's time zone is unset, then UTC will be used.
The optional datetime argument lets you calculate an offset for some time other
than "right now".
This returns a DateTime (or string) consistent with Jifty's date format.
WHY?¶
There are other ways to do some of these things and some of the decisions here
may seem arbitrary, particularly if you read the code. They are.
These things are valuable to applications built by Best Practical Solutions, so
it's here. If you disagree with the policy or need to do it differently, then
you probably need to implement something yourself using a DateTime::Format::*
class or your own code.
Parts may be cleaned up and the API cleared up a bit more in the future.
SEE ALSO¶
DateTime, DateTime::TimeZone, Jifty::CurrentUser
LICENSE¶
Jifty is Copyright 2005-2010 Best Practical Solutions, LLC. Jifty is distributed
under the same terms as Perl itself.