Provided by: libtangram-perl_2.12-1_all bug

NAME

       Tangram::Type::TimeAndDate - map date & time fields

SYNOPSIS

          use Tangram;

          # any of:
          use Tangram::Type::Date;   # RAW - use with caution
          use Tangram::Type::Time;
          use Tangram::Type::Date::Cooked;   # pure ISO-8601
          use Tangram::Type::Date::DateTime;
          use Tangram::Type::Date::Manip;
          use Tangram::Type::Date::TimePiece;

          Tangram::Schema->new(
             classes => {
                 NaturalPerson => {
                    fields => {
                        rawdatetime => [ qw( birth death ) ],
                        rawdate => [ qw( depart return ) ],
                        rawtime => [ qw( breakfast lunch dinner ) ],
                        cookeddatetime => [ qw( cooked ) ],
                        dmdatetime => [ qw( datemanip ) ],
                        timepiece => [ qw( fob ) ],
                        datetime => [ qw( bloat ) ],

DESCRIPTION

       These classes are responsible for mapping strings to SQL date or time types. These classes
       are not imported by Tangram.pm, thus they must be explicitly imported via a "use"
       directive.

       The three typetags "rawdate", "rawtime" and "rawdatetime" are for mapping strings to SQL
       date/time types, for databases that differentiate between "dates" and "times".  'Raw'
       means that Tangram doesn't attempt to interpret the strings, it merely passes them down to
       DBI.

       "cookeddatetime" is like "rawdatetime" except that the date is converted from the DBMS
       format to ISO-8601 in the form :

         YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS

       for example:

         2004-12-25T13:14:15

       Other modules then further cook this ISO date into an object as is the convention for a
       particular module.  This only works with back-ends that allow per-connection settings for
       the default date format, such as Tangram::Driver::Oracle.

       On the way back out, the date is converted back to the DBMS format.  This is achieved via
       vendor-specific functions mentioned in "Tangram::Relational".

       The persistent fields may be specified either as a hash or as an array of field names.

       In the hash form, each entry consists in a field name and an associated option hash. The
       option hash may contain the following fields:

       •   col

       •   sql

       "col" sets the name of the column used to store the field's value. This field is optional,
       it defaults to the persistent field name. Override if the field name is not an acceptable
       SQL column name.

       "sql" sets the SQL type of the column. Used by Schema::deploy() when initializing a
       database. Defaults to 'VARCHAR(255) NULL' for strings, 'INT NULL' for ints and 'REAL NULL'
       for reals.

       The persistent fields may also be specified as an array of strings, in which case the
       defaults are used.