The Perl Toolchain Summit needs more sponsors. If your company depends on Perl, please support this very important event.

NAME

Palm::Datebook - Handler for Palm DateBook databases.

SYNOPSIS

    use Palm::Datebook;

DESCRIPTION

The Datebook PDB handler is a helper class for the Palm::PDB package. It parses DateBook databases.

AppInfo block

The AppInfo block begins with standard category support. See Palm::StdAppInfo for details.

Sort block

    $pdb->{sort}

This is a scalar, the raw data of the sort block.

Records

    $record = $pdb->{records}[N]

    $record->{day}
    $record->{month}
    $record->{year}

The day, month and year of the event. The day and month start at 1 (i.e., for January, $record->{month} is set to 1). The year is a four-digit number (for dates in 2001, $record->{year} is "2001").

For repeating events, these fields specify the first date at which the event occurs.

    $record->{start_hour}
    $record->{start_minute}
    $record->{end_hour}
    $record->{end_minute}

The start and end times of the event. For untimed events, all of these are 0xff.

    $record->{when_changed}

This is defined and true iff the "when info" for the record has changed. I don't know what this means.

    $record->{alarm}{advance}
    $record->{alarm}{unit}

If the record has an alarm associated with it, the %{$record->{alarm}} hash exists. The "unit" subfield is an integer: 0 for minutes, 1 for hours, 2 for days. The "advance" subfield specifies how many units before the event the alarm should ring. e.g., if "unit" is 1 and "advance" is 5, then the alarm will sound 5 hours before the event.

If "advance" is -1, then there is no alarm associated with this event.

    %{$record->{repeat}}

This has exists iff this is a repeating event.

    $record->{repeat}{type}

An integer which specifies the type of repeat:

0

no repeat.

1

a daily event, one that occurs every day.

2

a weekly event, one that occurs every week on the same day(s). An event may occur on several days every week, e.g., every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

For weekly events, the following fields are defined:

    @{$record->{repeat}{repeat_days}}

This is an array of 7 elements; each element is true iff the event occurs on the corresponding day. Element 0 is Sunday, element 1 is Monday, and so forth.

    $record->{repeat}{start_of_week}

I'm not sure what this is, but the Datebook app appears to perform some hairy calculations involving this.

3

a "monthly by day" event, e.g., one that occurs on the second Friday of every month.

For "monthly by day" events, the following fields are defined:

    $record->{repeat}{weeknum}

The number of the week on which the event occurs. 0 means the first week of the month, 1 means the second week of the month, and so forth. A value of 5 means that the event occurs on the last week of the month.

    $record->{repeat}{daynum}

An integer, the day of the week on which the event occurs. 0 means Sunday, 1 means Monday, and so forth.

4

a "monthly by date" event, e.g., one that occurs on the 12th of every month.

5

a yearly event, e.g., one that occurs every year on December 25th.

    $record->{repeat}{frequency}

Specifies the frequency of the repeat. For instance, if the event is a daily one, and $record->{repeat}{frequency} is 3, then the event occurs every 3 days.

    $record->{repeat}{unknown}

I don't know what this is.

    $record->{repeat}{end_day}
    $record->{repeat}{end_month}
    $record->{repeat}{end_year}

The last day, month and year on which the event occurs.

    @{$record->{exceptions}}
    $day   = $record->{exceptions}[N][0]
    $month = $record->{exceptions}[N][1]
    $year  = $record->{exceptions}[N][2]

If there are any exceptions to a repeating event, e.g. a weekly meeting that was cancelled one time, then the @{$record->{exceptions}} array is defined.

Each element in this array is a reference to an anonymous array with three elements: the day, month, and year of the exception.

    $record->{description}

A text string, the description of the event.

    $record->{note}

A text string, the note (if any) attached to the event.

METHODS

new

  $pdb = new Palm::Datebook;

Create a new PDB, initialized with the various Palm::Datebook fields and an empty record list.

new_Record

  $record = $pdb->new_Record;

Creates a new Datebook record, with blank values for all of the fields.

new_Record does not add the new record to $pdb. For that, you want $pdb->append_Record.

AUTHOR

Andrew Arensburger <arensb@ooblick.com>

SEE ALSO

Palm::PDB(3)

Palm::StdAppInfo(3)

5 POD Errors

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

Around line 103:

Expected text after =item, not a number

Around line 107:

Expected text after =item, not a number

Around line 126:

Expected text after =item, not a number

Around line 145:

Expected text after =item, not a number

Around line 150:

Expected text after =item, not a number