Data::ICal::Entry(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Data::ICal::Entry(3)NAMEData::ICal::Entry - Represents an entry in an iCalendar file
SYNOPSIS
my $vtodo = Data::ICal::Entry::Todo->new();
$vtodo->add_property(
# ... see Data::ICal::Entry::Todo documentation
);
$vtodo->add_properties( ... );
$calendar->add_entry($vtodo);
$event->add_entry($alarm);
$event->add_entries($alarm1, ...);
# or all in one go
my $vtodo = Data::ICal::Entry::Todo->new( \%props, \@entries );
DESCRIPTION
A Data::ICal::Entry object represents a single entry in an iCalendar
file. (Note that the iCalendar RFC refers to entries as "components".)
iCalendar defines several types of entries, such as events and to-do
lists; each of these corresponds to a subclass of Data::ICal::Entry
(though only to-do lists and events are currently implemented).
Data::ICal::Entry should be treated as an abstract base class -- all
objects created should be of its subclasses. The entire calendar
itself (the Data::ICal object) is also represented as a
Data::ICal::Entry object.
Each entry has an entry type (such as "VCALENDAR" or "VEVENT"), a
series of "properties", and possibly some sub-entries. (Only the root
Data::ICal object can have sub-entries, except for alarm entries
contained in events and to-dos (not yet implemented).)
METHODS
new
Creates a new entry object with no properties or sub-entries.
as_string [ crlf => "CRLF" ]
Returns the entry as an appropriately formatted string (with trailing
newline).
Properties are returned in alphabetical order, with multiple properties
of the same name returned in the order added. (Property order is
unimportant in iCalendar, and this makes testing easier.)
If any mandatory property is missing, issues a warning.
The string to use as a newline can optionally be specified by giving
the a "crlf" argument, which defaults to "\x0d\x0a", per RFC 2445 spec;
this option is primarily for backwards compatibility with versions of
this module before 0.16.
add_entry $entry
Adds an entry to this entry. (According to the standard, this should
only be called on either a to-do or event entry with an alarm entry, or
on a calendar entry (Data::ICal) with a to-do, event, journal,
timezone, or free/busy entry.)
Returns true if the entry was successfully added, and false otherwise
(perhaps because you tried to add an entry of an invalid type, but this
check hasn't been implemented yet).
add_entries $entry1, [$entry2, ...]
Convenience function to call "add_entry" several times with a list of
entries.
entries
Returns a reference to the array of subentries of this entry.
properties
Returns a reference to the hash of properties of this entry. The keys
are property names and the values are array references containing
Data::ICal::Property objects.
property
Given a property name returns a reference to the array of
Data::ICal::Property objects.
add_property $propname => $propval
Creates a new Data::ICal::Property object with name $propname and value
$propval and adds it to the event.
If the property is not known to exist for that object type and does not
begin with "X-", issues a warning.
If the property is known to be unique, replaces the original property.
To specify parameters for the property, let $propval be a two-element
array reference where the first element is the property value and the
second element is a hash reference. The keys of the hash are parameter
names; the values should be either strings or array references of
strings, depending on whether the parameter should have one or multiple
(to be comma-separated) values.
Examples of setting parameters:
# Add a property with a parameter of VALUE set to 'DATE'
$event->add_property( rdate => [ $date, { VALUE => 'DATE' } ] );
add_properties $propname1 => $propval1, [$propname2 => $propname2, ...]
Convenience function to call "add_property" several times with a list
of properties.
This method is guaranteed to call add "add_property" on them in the
order given, so that unique properties given later in the call will
take precedence over those given earlier. (This is unrelated to the
order of properties when the entry is rendered as a string, though.)
Parameters for the properties are specified in the same way as in
"add_property".
mandatory_unique_properties
Subclasses should override this method (which returns an empty list by
default) to provide a list of lower case strings identifying the
properties which must appear exactly once in the subclass's entry type.
mandatory_repeatable_properties
Subclasses should override this method (which returns an empty list by
default) to provide a list of lower case strings identifying the
properties which must appear at least once in the subclass's entry
type.
optional_unique_properties
Subclasses should override this method (which returns an empty list by
default) to provide a list of lower case strings identifying the
properties which must appear at most once in the subclass's entry type.
optional_repeatable_properties
Subclasses should override this method (which returns an empty list by
default) to provide a list of lower case strings identifying the
properties which may appear zero, one, or more times in the subclass's
entry type.
is_property $name
Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the property $name is
known to the class (that is, if it's listed in
"(mandatory/optional)_(unique/repeatable)_properties").
is_mandatory $name
Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the property $name is
known to the class as mandatory (that is, if it's listed in
"mandatory_(unique/repeatable)_properties").
is_optional $name
Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the property $name is
known to the class as optional (that is, if it's listed in
"optional_(unique/repeatable)_properties").
is_unique $name
Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the property $name is
known to the class as unique (that is, if it's listed in
"(mandatory/optional)_unique_properties").
is_repeatable $name
Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the property $name is
known to the class as repeatable (that is, if it's listed in
"(mandatory/optional)_repeatable_properties").
ical_entry_type
Subclasses should override this method to provide the identifying type
name of the entry (such as "VCALENDAR" or "VTODO").
vcal10 [$bool]
Gets or sets a boolean saying whether this entry should be interpreted
as vCalendar 1.0 (as opposed to iCalendar 2.0). Generally, you can
just set this on your main Data::ICal object when you construct it;
"add_entry" automatically makes sure that sub-entries end up with the
same value as their parents.
header
Returns the header line for the entry (including trailing newline).
footer
Returns the footer line for the entry (including trailing newline).
parse_object
Translate a Text::vFile::asData sub object into the appropriate
Data::iCal::Event subtype.
AUTHOR
Jesse Vincent "<jesse@bestpractical.com>" with David Glasser, Simon
Wistow, and Alex Vandiver
LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2005 - 2009, Best Practical Solutions, LLC. All rights
reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
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perl v5.18.2 2013-07-03 Data::ICal::Entry(3)