NAME
DateTime::Format::Unicode - Unicode CLDR Formatter for DateTime
SYNOPSIS
use DateTime::Format::Unicode;
my $fmt = DateTime::Format::Unicode->new(
locale => 'ja-Kana-JP',
# optional, defaults to the locale medium size date formatting
# See: DateTime::Locale::FromCLDR for more information
pattern => 'HH:mm:ss',
# optional
time_zone => 'Asia/Tokyo',
# will make error become fatal and have this API die instead of setting an exception object
on_error => 'fatal',
) || die( DateTime::Format::Unicode->error );
or, maybe, just:
my $fmt = DateTime::Format::Unicode->new;
which, will default to "locale" "en" with date medium-size format
pattern "MMM d, y"
VERSION
v0.1.0
DESCRIPTION
This is a Unicode CLDR (Common Locale Data
Repository) formatter for DateTime
It differs from the default formatter used in DateTime with its method
format_cldr in several aspects:
1. It uses DateTime::Locale::FromCLDR
A much more comprehensive and accurate API to dynamically access the
Unicode "CLDR" data whereas the module DateTime relies on,
DateTime::Locale, which uses static data from over 1,000
pre-generated modules.
2. It allows for any "locale"
Since, it uses dynamic data, you can use any "locale", from the
simple "en" to more complex "es-001-valencia", or even
"ja-t-de-t0-und-x0-medical"
3. It allows formatting of datetime intervals
Datetime intervals are very important, and unfortunately unsupported
by DateTime as of July 2024.
4. It supports more pattern tokens
DateTime format_cldr does not support all of the CLDR pattern tokens
, but DateTime::Format::Unicode does.
Known pattern tokens unsupported by DateTime are:
* "b"
Period of the day, such as "am", "pm", "noon", "midnight"
See "calendar_term" in Locale::Unicode::Data and its
corollary "day_period" in Locale::Unicode::Data
* "B"
Flexible day periods, such as "at night"
See "calendar_term" in Locale::Unicode::Data and its
corollary "day_period" in Locale::Unicode::Data
* "O"
Zone, such as "O" to get the short localized GMT format
"GMT-8", or "OOOO" to get the long localized GMT format
"GMT-08:00"
* "r"
Related Gregorian year (numeric).
The documentation states that "For the Gregorian calendar,
the ‘r’ year is the same as the ‘u’ year."
* "U"
Cyclic year name. However, since this is for non gregorian
calendars, like Chinese or Hindu calendars, and since
DateTime only supports gregorian calendar, we do not support
it either.
* "x"
Timezone, such as "x" would be -08, "xx" -0800 or +0800,
"xxx" would be "-08:00" or "+08:00", "xxxx" would be -0800
or +0000 and "xxxxx" would be "-08:00", or "-07:52:58" or
"+00:00"
* "X"
Timezone, such as "X" (-08 or +0530 or "Z"), "XX" (-0800 or
"Z"), "XXX" ("-08:00"), "XXXX" (-0800 or -075258 or "Z"),
"XXXXX" ("-08:00" or "-07:52:58" or "Z")
DateTime::Format::Unicode only formats "CLDR" datetime patterns, and
does not parse them back into a DateTime object. If you want to achieve
that, there is already the module DateTime::Format::CLDR that does this.
DateTime::Format::CLDR relies on "format_cldr" in DateTime for "CLDR"
formatting by the way.
CONSTRUCTOR
new
This takes some hash or hash reference of options, instantiates a new
DateTime::Format::Unicode object, and returns it.
Supported options are as follows. Each option can be later accessed or
modified by their associated method.
* "locale"
A locale, which may be very simple like "en" or much more complex
like "ja-t-de-t0-und-x0-medical" or maybe "es-039-valencia"
(valencian variant of Spanish as spoken in South Europe)
If not provided, this will default to "en"
* "on_error"
Specifies what to do upon error. Possible values are: "undef"
(default behaviour), "fatal" (will die), or a "CODE" reference that
will be called with the exception object as its sole argument,
before "undef" is returned in scalar context, or an empty list in
list context.
* "pattern"
A "CLDR" pattern. If none is provided, this will default to the
medium-size date pattern for the given "locale". For example, as per
the "CLDR", for English, this would be "MMM d, y" whereas for the
"locale" "ja", this would be "y/MM/dd"
* "time_zone"
Set the timezone by providing either a DateTime::TimeZone object, or
a string representing a timezone.
It defaults to the special DateTime timezone floating
METHODS
format_datetime
This takes a DateTime object, or if none is provided, it will
instantiate one using "now" in DateTime, and formats the pattern that
was set and return the resulting formatted string.
Errors
This module does not die upon errors unless requested to. Instead it
sets an error object that can be retrieved.
When an error occurred, an error object will be set and the method will
return "undef" in scalar context and an empty list in list context.
The only occasions when this module will die is when there is an
internal design error, which would be my fault, or if the value set with
on_error is "fatal" or also if the "CODE" reference set with on_error
would, itself, die.
AUTHOR
Jacques Deguest
SEE ALSO
DateTime, DateTime::Format::FromCLDR, Locale::Unicode,
Locale::Unicode::Data, DateTime::Locale
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright(c) 2024 DEGUEST Pte. Ltd.
All rights reserved This program is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.