NAME¶
HTML::CalendarMonthSimple - Perl Module for Generating HTML Calendars
SYNOPSIS¶
use HTML::CalendarMonthSimple;
$cal = new HTML::CalendarMonthSimple('year'=>2001,'month'=>2);
$cal->width('50%');
$cal->border(10);
$cal->header('Text at the top of the Grid');
$cal->setcontent(14,"Valentine's Day");
$cal->setdatehref(14, 'http://localhost/');
$cal->addcontent(14,"<p>Don't forget to buy flowers.");
$cal->addcontent(13,"Guess what's tomorrow?");
$cal->bgcolor('pink');
print $cal->as_HTML;
DESCRIPTION¶
HTML::CalendarMonthSimple is a Perl module for generating, manipulating, and
printing a HTML calendar grid for a specified month. It is intended as a
faster and easier-to-use alternative to HTML::CalendarMonth.
This module requires the Date::Calc module, which is available from CPAN if you
don't already have it.
INTERFACE METHODS¶
new(ARGUMENTS)¶
Naturally,
new() returns a newly constructed calendar object.
The optional constructor arguments 'year' and 'month' can specify which month's
calendar will be used. If either is omitted, the current value (e.g.
"today") is used. An important note is that the month and the year
are NOT the standard C or Perl -- use a month in the range 1-12 and a real
year, e.g. 2001.
The arguments 'today_year', 'today_month', and 'today_date' may also be
specified, to specify what "today" is. If not specified, the system
clock will be used. This is particularly useful when the
todaycolor()
et al methods are used, and/or if you're dealing with multiple timezones. Note
that these arguments change what "today" is, which means that if you
specify a today_year and a today_month then you are effectively specifying a
'year' and 'month' argument as well, though you can also specify a year and
month argument and override the "today" behavior.
# Examples:
# Create a calendar for this month.
$cal = new HTML::CalendarMonthSimple();
# A calendar for a specific month/year
$cal = new HTML::CalendarMonthSimple('month'=>2,'year'=>2000);
# Pretend that today is June 10, 2000 and display the "current" calendar
$cal = new HTML::CalendarMonthSimple('today_year'=>2000,'today_month'=>6,'today_date'=>10);
year()¶
month()¶
today_year()¶
today_month()¶
today_date()¶
monthname()¶
These methods simply return the year/month/date of the calendar, as specified in
the constructor.
monthname() returns the text name of the month, e.g.
"December".
setcontent(DATE,STRING)¶
addcontent(DATE,STRING)¶
getcontent(DATE)¶
These methods are used to control the content of date cells within the calendar
grid. The DATE argument may be a numeric date or it may be a string describing
a certain occurrence of a weekday, e.g. "3MONDAY" to represent
"the third Monday of the month being worked with", or it may be the
plural of a weekday name, e.g. "wednesdays" to represent all
occurrences of the given weekday. The weekdays are case-insensitive.
Since plural weekdays (e.g. 'wednesdays') is not a single date,
getcontent() will return the content only for the first occurrence of
that day within a month.
# Examples:
# The cell for the 15th of the month will now say something.
$cal->setcontent(15,"An Important Event!");
# Later down the program, we want the content to be boldfaced.
$cal->setcontent(15,"<b>" . $cal->getcontent(15) . "</b>");
# addcontent() does not clobber existing content.
# Also, if you setcontent() to '', you've deleted the content.
$cal->setcontent(16,'');
$cal->addcontent(16,"<p>Hello World</p>");
$cal->addcontent(16,"<p>Hello Again</p>");
print $cal->getcontent(16); # Prints 2 sentences
# Padded and decimal numbers may be used, as well:
$cal->setcontent(3.14159,'Third of the month');
$cal->addcontent('00003.0000','Still the third');
$cal->getcontent('3'); # Gets the 2 sentences
# The second Sunday of May is some holiday or another...
$cal->addcontent('2sunday','Some Special Day') if ($cal->month() == 5);
# Every Wednesday is special...
$cal->addcontent('wednesdays','Every Wednesday!');
# either of these will return the content for the 1st Friday of the month
$cal->getcontent('1friday');
$cal->getcontent('Fridays'); # you really should use '1friday' for the first Friday
Note: A change in 1.21 is that all content is now stored in a single set of
date-indexed buckets. Previously, the content for weekdays, plural weekdays,
and numeric dates were stored separately and could be fetched and set
independently. This led to buggy behavior, so now a single storage set is
used.
# Example:
# if the 9th of the month is the second Wednesday...
$cal->setcontent(9,'ninth');
$cal->addcontent('2wednesday','second wednesday');
$cal->addcontent('wednesdays','every wednesday');
print $cal->getcontent(9);
In version 1.20 and previous, this would print 'ninth' but in 1.21 and later,
this will print all three items (since the 9th is not only the 9th but also a
Wednesday and the second Wednesday). This could have implications if you use
setcontent() on a set of days, since other content may be overwritten:
# Example:
# the second setcontent() effectively overwrites the first one
$cal->setcontent(9,'ninth');
$cal->setcontent('2wednesday','second wednesday');
$cal->setcontent('wednesdays','every wednesday');
print $cal->getcontent(9); # returns 'every wednesday' because that was the last assignment!
as_HTML()¶
This method returns a string containing the HTML table for the month.
# Example:
print $cal->as_HTML();
It's okay to continue modifying the calendar after calling
as_HTML(). My
guess is that you'd want to call
as_HTML() again to print the
further-modified calendar, but that's your business...
weekstartsonmonday([1|0])¶
By default, calendars are displayed with Sunday as the first day of the week
(American style). Most of the world prefers for calendars to start the week on
Monday. This method selects which type is used: 1 specifies that the week
starts on Monday, 0 specifies that the week starts on Sunday (the default). If
no value is given at all, the current value (1 or 0) is returned.
# Example:
$cal->weekstartsonmonday(1); # switch over to weeks starting on Monday
$cal->weekstartsonmonday(0); # switch back to the default, where weeks start on Sunday
# Example:
print "The week starts on " . ($cal->weekstartsonmonday() ? 'Sunday' : 'Monday') . "\n";
setdatehref(DATE,URL_STRING)¶
getdatehref(DATE)¶
These allow the date-number in a calendar cell to become a hyperlink to the
specified URL. The DATE may be either a numeric date or any of the weekday
formats described in
setcontent(), et al. If plural weekdays (e.g.
'wednesdays') are used with
getdatehref() the URL of the first
occurrence of that weekday in the month will be returned (since 'wednesdays'
is not a single date).
# Example:
# The date number in the cell for the 15th of the month will be a link
# then we change our mind and delete the link by assigning a null string
$cal->setdatehref(15,"http://sourceforge.net/");
$cal->setdatehref(15,'');
# Example:
# the second Wednesday of the month goes to some website
$cal->setdatehref('2wednesday','http://www.second-wednesday.com/');
# Example:
# every Wednesday goes to a website
# note that this will effectively undo the '2wednesday' assignment we just did!
# if we wanted the second Wednesday to go to that special URL, we should've done that one after this!
$cal->setdatehref('wednesdays','http://every-wednesday.net/');
contentfontsize([STRING])¶
contentfontsize() sets the font size for the contents of the cell,
overriding the browser's default. Can be expressed as an absolute (1 .. 6) or
relative (-3 .. +3) size.
border([INTEGER])¶
This specifies the value of the border attribute to the <TABLE>
declaration for the calendar. As such, this controls the thickness of the
border around the calendar table. The default value is 5.
If a value is not specified, the current value is returned. If a value is
specified, the border value is changed and the new value is returned.
width([INTEGER][%])¶
This sets the value of the width attribute to the <TABLE> declaration for
the calendar. As such, this controls the horizintal width of the calendar.
The width value can be either an integer (e.g. 600) or a percentage string (e.g.
"80%"). Most web browsers take an integer to be the table's width in
pixels and a percentage to be the table width relative to the screen's width.
The default width is "100%".
If a value is not specified, the current value is returned. If a value is
specified, the border value is changed and the new value is returned.
# Examples:
$cal->width(600); # absolute pixel width
$cal->width("100%"); # percentage of screen size
showdatenumbers([1 or 0])¶
If
showdatenumbers() is set to 1, then the
as_HTML() method will
put date labels in each cell (e.g. a 1 on the 1st, a 2 on the 2nd, etc.) If
set to 0, then the date labels will not be printed. The default is 1.
If no value is specified, the current value is returned.
The date numbers are shown in boldface, normal size font. If you want to change
this, consider setting
showdatenumbers() to 0 and using
setcontent()/
addcontent() instead.
If
showweekdayheaders() is set to 1 (the default) then calendars rendered
via
as_HTML() will display the names of the days of the week. If set to
0, the days' names will not be displayed.
If
weekdayheadersbig() is set to 1 (the default) then the weekday headers
will be in <th> cells. The effect in most web browsers is that they will
be boldfaced and centered. If set to 0, the weekday headers will be in
<td> cells and in normal text.
For both functions, if no value is specified, the current value is returned.
cellalignment([STRING])¶
vcellalignment([STRING])¶
cellalignment() sets the value of the align attribute to the <TD>
tag for each day's cell. This controls how text will be horizontally
centered/aligned within the cells.
vcellalignment() does the same for
vertical alignment. By default, content is aligned horizontally
"left" and vertically "top"
Any value can be used, if you think the web browser will find it interesting.
Some useful alignments are: left, right, center, top, and bottom.
By default, the current month and year are displayed at the top of the calendar
grid. This is called the "header".
The
header() method allows you to set the header to whatever you like. If
no new header is specified, the current header is returned.
If the header is set to an empty string, then no header will be printed at all.
(No, you won't be stuck with a big empty cell!)
# Example:
# Set the month/year header to something snazzy.
my($y,$m) = ( $cal->year() , $cal->monthname() );
$cal->header("<center><font size=+2 color=red>$m $y</font></center>\n\n");
bgcolor([STRING])¶
weekdaycolor([STRING])¶
weekendcolor([STRING])¶
todaycolor([STRING])¶
bordercolor([STRING])¶
weekdaybordercolor([STRING])¶
weekendbordercolor([STRING])¶
todaybordercolor([STRING])¶
contentcolor([STRING])¶
weekdaycontentcolor([STRING])¶
weekendcontentcolor([STRING])¶
todaycontentcolor([STRING])¶
These define the colors of the cells. If a string (which should be either a HTML
color-code like '#000000' or a color-word like 'yellow') is supplied as an
argument, then the color is set to that specified. Otherwise, the current
value is returned. To un-set a value, try assigning the null string as a
value.
The bgcolor defines the color of all cells. The weekdaycolor overrides the
bgcolor for weekdays (Monday through Friday), the weekendcolor overrides the
bgcolor for weekend days (Saturday and Sunday), and the todaycolor overrides
the bgcolor for today's date. (Which may not mean a lot if you're looking at a
calendar other than the current month.)
The weekdayheadercolor overrides the bgcolor for the weekday headers that appear
at the top of the calendar if
showweekdayheaders() is true, and
weekendheadercolor does the same thing for the weekend headers. The
headercolor overrides the bgcolor for the month/year header at the top of the
calendar. The
headercontentcolor(),
weekdayheadercontentcolor(),
and
weekendheadercontentcolor() methods affect the color of the
corresponding headers' contents and default to the
contentcolor().
The colors of the cell borders may be set: bordercolor determines the color of
the calendar grid's outside border, and is the default color of the inner
border for individual cells. The inner bordercolor may be overridden for the
various types of cells via weekdaybordercolor, weekendbordercolor, and
todaybordercolor.
Finally, the color of the cells' contents may be set with contentcolor,
weekdaycontentcolor, weekendcontentcolor, and todaycontentcolor. The
contentcolor is the default color of cell content, and the other methods
override this for the appropriate days' cells.
# Example:
$cal->bgcolor('white'); # Set the default cell bgcolor
$cal->bordercolor('green'); # Set the default border color
$cal->contentcolor('black'); # Set the default content color
$cal->headercolor('yellow'); # Set the bgcolor of the Month+Year header
$cal->headercontentcolor('yellow'); # Set the content color of the Month+Year header
$cal->weekdayheadercolor('orange'); # Set the bgcolor of weekdays' headers
$cal->weekendheadercontentcolor('blue'); # Set the color of weekday headers' contents
$cal->weekendheadercolor('pink'); # Set the bgcolor of weekends' headers
$cal->weekdayheadercontentcolor('blue'); # Set the color of weekend headers' contents
$cal->weekendcolor('palegreen'); # Override weekends' cell bgcolor
$cal->weekendcontentcolor('blue'); # Override weekends' content color
$cal->todaycolor('red'); # Override today's cell bgcolor
$cal->todaycontentcolor('yellow'); # Override today's content color
print $cal->as_HTML; # Print a really ugly calendar!
datecolor(DATE,[STRING])¶
datecontentcolor(DATE,[STRING])¶
datebordercolor(DATE,[STRING])¶
These methods set the cell color and the content color for the specified date,
and will return the current value if STRING is not specified. These color
settings will override any of the settings mentioned above, even
todaycolor() and
todaycontentcolor().
The date may be a numeric date or a weekday string as described in
setcontent() et al. Note that if a plural weekday is used (e.g.
'sundays') then, since it's not a single date, the value for the first
occurrence of that weekday will be returned (e.g. the first Sunday's color).
# Example: a red-letter day!
$cal->datecolor(3,'pink');
$cal->datecontentcolor(3,'red');
# Example:
# Every Tuesday is a Soylent Green day...
# Note that if the 3rd was a Tuesday, this later assignment would override the previous one.
# see the docs for setcontent() et all for more information.
$cal->datecolor('tuesdays','green');
$cal->datecontentcolor('tuesdays','yellow');
nowrap([1 or 0])¶
If set to 1, then calendar cells will have the NOWRAP attribute set, preventing
their content from wrapping. If set to 0 (the default) then NOWRAP is not used
and very long content may cause cells to become stretched out.
sharpborders([1 or 0])¶
If set to 1, this gives very crisp edges between the table cells. If set to 0
(the default) standard HTML cells are used. If neither value is specified, the
current value is returned.
FYI: To accomplish the crisp border, the entire calendar table is wrapped inside
a table cell.
cellheight([NUMBER])¶
This specifies the height in pixels of each cell in the calendar. By default, no
height is defined and the web browser usually chooses a reasonable default.
If no value is given, the current value is returned.
To un-specify a height, try specifying a height of 0 or undef.
tableclass([STRING])¶
cellclass([STRING])¶
weekdaycellclass([STRING])¶
weekendcellclass([STRING])¶
todaycellclass([STRING])¶
datecellclass(DATE,[STRING])¶
These specify which CSS class will be attributed to the calendar's table and the
calendar's cells. By default, no classes are specified or used.
tableclass() sets the CSS class for the calendar table.
cellclass() is used for all calendar cells.
weekdaycellclass(),
weekendcellclass(), and
todaycellclass() override the
cellclass() for the corresponding types of cells.
headerclass()
is used for the calendar's header.
datecellclass() sets the CSS class for the cell for the specified date.
This setting will override any of the other cell class settings, even
todaycellclass() This date must be numeric; it cannot be a string such
as "2wednesday"
If no value is given, the current value is returned.
To un-specify a class, try specifying an empty string, e.g. cellclass('')
sunday([STRING])¶
saturday([STRING])¶
weekdays([MONDAY,TUESDAY,WEDNESDAY,THURSDAY,FRIDAY])¶
These functions allow the days of the week to be "renamed", which is
useful for displaying the weekday headers in another language.
# show the days of the week in Spanish
$cal->saturday('Sabado');
$cal->sunday('Domingo');
$cal->weekdays('Lunes','Martes','Miercoles','Jueves','Viernes');
# show the days of the week in German
$cal->saturday('Samstag');
$cal->sunday('Sonntag');
$cal->weekdays('Montag','Dienstag','Mittwoch','Donnerstag','Freitag');
If no value is specified (or, for
weekdays() if exactly 5 arguments
aren't given) then the current value is returned.
BUGS, TODO, CHANGES¶
Changes in 1.01: Added VALIGN to cells, to make alignment work with browsers
better. Added
showweekdayheaders(). Corrected a bug that results in the
month not fitting on the grid (e.g. March 2003). Added
getdatehref()
and
setdatehref(). Corrected a bug that causes a blank week to be
printed at the beginning of some months.
Changes in 1.02: Added the color methods.
Changes in 1.03: More color methods!
Changes in 1.04: Added the "which weekday" capability to
addcontent(),
setcontent(), and
getcontent()
Changes in 1.05:
addcontent(), et al can now take strings such as '06' or
decimals such as '3.14' and will handle them correctly.
Changes in 1.06: Changed the "which weekday" interface a bit;
truncations such as "2Tue" no longer work, and must be spelled out
entirely ("2Tuesday"). Added "plural weekdays" support
(e.g. "wednesdays" for "every wednesday").
Changes in 1.07: Fixed a typo that caused an entirely empty calendar to be
displayed very small.
Changes in 1.08: Re-did the bugfixes described in 1.05, handling padded and
non-integer dates.
Changes in 1.09: Fixed the "2Monday", et al support; a bug was found
by Dale Wellman <dwellman@bpnetworks.com> where the 7th, 14th, 21st, and
28th days weren't properly computing which Nth weekday they were so
"1Monday" wouldn't work if the first Monday was the 7th of the
month.
Changes in 1.10: Added the
headercontentcolor(),
weekendheadercontentcolor(), and
weekdayheadercontentcolor()
methods, and made content headers use bgcolors, etc properly.
Changes in 1.11: The module's VERSION is now properly specified, so
"use" statements won't barf if they specify a minimum version. Added
the
vcellalignment() method so vertical content alignment is
independent of horizontal alignment.
Changes in 1.12: Fixed lots of warnings that were generated if
-w was
used, due to many values defaulting to undef/blank. Added the
sharpborders(),
nowrap(),
cellheight(),
cellclass(), and
weekdayheadersbig() methods.
cellclass(), the beginning of CSS support. Thanks, Bray!
Changes in 1.13: Added more CSS methods:
headerclass(),
weekdaycellclass(),
weekndcellclass(),
todaycellclass().
Added a test to the module distribution at the urging of CPAN testers.
Changes in 1.14: Added the
contentfontsize() method.
Changes in 1.15: Added the
datecolor(),
datecontentcolor(),
datebordercolor(), and
datecellclass() methods, allowind
cosmetic attributes to be changed on a per-date basis.
Changes in 1.16: Fixed a very stupid bug that made
addcontent() and
setcontent() not work. Sorry!
Changes in 1.17: Corrected
-w warnings about uninitialized values in
as_HTML().
Changes in 1.18: Added methods:
tableclass(),
sunday(),
saturday(),
weekdays(). Now day names can be internationalized!
Changes in 1.19: Fixed
as_HTML() such that blank/0 values can be used for
various values, e.g. border size, colors, etc. Previously, values had to be
non-zero or they were assumed to be undefined.
Ver 1.20 was a mistake on my part and was immediately superseded by 1.21.
Changes in 1.21: Fixed the internals of
setcontent() et al (see the
method's doc for details). Made
getdatehref(),
setdatehref(),
and
datecolor() et al, able to handle weekdays in addition to numeric
dates.
Changes in 1.22: Added the much-desired
weekstartsonmonday() method. Now
weeks can start on Monday and end with the weekend, instead of the American
style of starting on Sunday.
Changes in 1.23: Added
today_year() et al. "Today" can now be
overridden in the constructor.
Changes in 1.24: Minor corrections to the HTML so it passes XML validation.
Thanks a bundle, Peter!
Changes in 1.25: A minor typo correction. Nothing big.
AUTHORS, CREDITS, COPYRIGHTS¶
This Perl module is freeware. It may be copied, derived, used, and distributed
without limitation.
HTML::CalendarMonth was written and is copyrighted by Matthew P. Sisk
<sisk@mojotoad.com> and provided inspiration for the module's interface
and features. None of Matt Sisk's code appears herein.
HTML::CalendarMonthSimple was written by Gregor Mosheh
<stigmata@blackangel.net> Frankly, the major inspiration was the
difficulty and unnecessary complexity of HTML::CalendarMonth. (Laziness is a
virtue.)
This would have been extremely difficult if not for Date::Calc. Many thanks to
Steffen Beyer <sb@engelschall.com> for a very fine set of date-related
functions!
Dave Fuller <dffuller@yahoo.com> added the
getdatehref() and
setdatehref() methods, and pointed out the bugs that were corrected in
1.01.
Danny J. Sohier <danny@gel.ulaval.ca> provided many of the color
functions.
Bernie Ledwick <bl@man.fwltech.com> provided base code for the today*()
functions, and for the handling of cell borders.
Justin Ainsworth <jrainswo@olemiss.edu> provided the
vcellalignment() concept and code.
Jessee Porter <porterje@us.ibm.com> provided fixes for 1.12 to correct
those warnings.
Bray Jones <bjones@vialogix.com> supplied the
sharpborders(),
nowrap(),
cellheight(),
cellclass() methods.
Bill Turner <b@brilliantcorners.org> supplied the
headerclass()
method and the rest of the methods added to 1.13
Bill Rhodes <wrhodes@27.org> provided the
contentfontsize() method
for version 1.14
Alberto Simo~es <albie@alfarrabio.di.uminho.pt> provided the
tableclass() function and the
saturday(),
sunday(), and
weekdays() functions for version 1.18. Thanks, Alberto, I've been
wanting this since the beginning!
Blair Zajac <blair@orcaware.com> provided the fixes for 1.19
Thanks to Kurt <kurt@otown.com> for the bug report that made all the new
stuff in 1.21 possible.
Many thanks to Stefano Rodighiero <larsen@libero.it> for the code that
made
weekstartsonmonday() possible. This was a much-requested feature
that will make many people happy!
Dan Boitnott <dboitnot@yahoo.com> provided
today_year() et al in
1.23
Peter Venables <pvenables@rogers.com> provided the XML validation fixes
for 1.24