Provided by: libdatetime-format-rfc3339-perl_1.8.0-1_all bug

NAME

       DateTime::Format::RFC3339 - Parse and format RFC3339 datetime strings

VERSION

       Version 1.8.0

SYNOPSIS

          use DateTime::Format::RFC3339;

          my $format = DateTime::Format::RFC3339->new();
          my $dt = $format->parse_datetime( '2002-07-01T13:50:05Z' );

          # 2002-07-01T13:50:05Z
          say $format->format_datetime( $dt );

DESCRIPTION

       This module understands the RFC3339 date/time format, an ISO 8601 profile, defined at
       <http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3339>.

       It can be used to parse these formats in order to create the appropriate objects.

CONSTRUCTOR

   new
          my $format = DateTime::Format::RFC3339->new();
          my $format = DateTime::Format::RFC3339->new( %options );

       A number of options are supported:

       •   decimals

              decimals => undef      [default]
              decimals => $decimals

           Date-time strings generated by <format_datetime> will have this many decimals (an
           integer from zero to nine). If "undef", zero will be used if the date-time has no
           decimals, nine otherwise.

       •   sep

              sep => "T"      [default]
              sep => $sep

       •   sep_re

              sep_re => $sep_re

           The spec allows for a separator other than ""T"" to be used between the date and the
           time.

           The string provided to the "sep" option is used when formatting date-time objects into
           strings, and the regex pattern provided to the "sep_re" option is used when parsing
           strings into date-time objects.

           The default for "sep_re" is a regex pattern that matches the separator (which is ""T""
           by default).

       •   uc_only

              uc_only => 0   [default]
              uc_only => 1

           Only an uppercase date and time separator and an uppercase timezone offset "Z" will be
           accepted by "parse_datetime" when this option is true.

METHODS

   parse_datetime
          my $dt = DateTime::Format::RFC3339->parse_datetime( $string );
          my $dt = $format->parse_datetime( $string );

       Given a RFC3339 datetime string, this method will return a new DateTime object.

       If given an improperly formatted string, this method will croak.

       For a more flexible parser, see DateTime::Format::ISO8601.

   format_datetime
          my $string = DateTime::Format::RFC3339->format_datetime( $dt );
          my $string = $format->format_datetime( $dt );

       Given a DateTime object, this methods returns a RFC3339 datetime string.

SEE ALSO

       •   DateTime

       •   DateTime::Format::ISO8601

       •   <http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3339>, "Date and Time on the Internet: Timestamps"

DOCUMENTATION AND SUPPORT

       You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

           perldoc DateTime::Format::RFC3339

       You can also find it online at this location:

       •   <https://metacpan.org/dist/Datetime-Format-RFC3339>

       If you need help, the following are great resources:

       •   <https://stackoverflow.com/|StackOverflow>

       •   <http://www.perlmonks.org/|PerlMonks>

       •   You may also contact the author directly.

BUGS

       Please report any bugs or feature requests using
       <https://github.com/ikegami/perl-Datetime-Format-RFC3339/issues>.  I will be notified, and
       then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.

REPOSITORY

       •   Web: <https://github.com/ikegami/perl-Datetime-Format-RFC3339>

       •   git: <https://github.com/ikegami/perl-Datetime-Format-RFC3339.git>

AUTHOR

       Eric Brine, "<ikegami@adaelis.com>"

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

       No rights reserved.

       The author has dedicated the work to the Commons by waiving all of his or her rights to
       the work worldwide under copyright law and all related or neighboring legal rights he or
       she had in the work, to the extent allowable by law.

       Works under CC0 do not require attribution. When citing the work, you should not imply
       endorsement by the author.