NAME¶
Weather::Com::DayPart - class representing daytime or night part of a forecast
SYNOPSIS¶
[...]
my @locations = $weather_finder->find('Heidelberg');
my $forecast = $locations[0]->forecast();
my $tomorrow_night = $forecast->day(1)->night();
print "Forecast for tomorrow night:\n";
print " - conditions will be ", $tomorrow_night->conditions(), "\n";
print " - humidity will be ", $tomorrow_night->humidity(), "\%\n";
print " - wind speed will be ", $tomorrow_night->wind()->speed(), "km/h\n";
DESCRIPTION¶
Via
Weather::Com::DayPart objects one can access the daytime or night
part of a
Weather::Com::DayForecast.
This class will
not be updated automatically with each call to one of its
methods. You need to call a method of your
Weather::Com::Forecast
object to get updated objects.
CONSTRUCTOR¶
You usually would not construct an object of this class yourself. This is
implicitely done when you call the "day()" or "night()"
method of a
Weather::Com::DayForecast object.
METHODS¶
type([$language])
Will return
day or
night.
This attribute is
dynamic language enabled.
conditions([$language])
Will return a textual description of the forecasted conditions.
This attribute is
dynamic language enabled.
humidity()
Will return the humidity.
icon()
Will return the icon number of the icon describing the forecasted weather.
precipitation()
Will return the percentage chance of precipitation.
wind()
Will return a
Weather::Com::Wind object.
AUTHOR¶
Thomas Schnuecker, <thomas@schnuecker.de>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
Copyright (C) 2004-2007 by Thomas Schnuecker
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.
The data provided by
weather.com and made accessible by this OO interface
can be used for free under special terms. Please have a look at the
application programming guide of
weather.com
(<
http://www.weather.com/services/xmloap.html>)!