Acme-CPANModules-Parse-HumanDate
view release on metacpan or search on metacpan
DateTime::Format::Natural
Author: SCHUBIGER <https://metacpan.org/author/SCHUBIGER>
Compared to DateTime::Format::Flexible, this module can also parse
duration in addition to date/time, e.g.:
2 years 3 months
And it also can extract the date expression from a longer string.
Speed-wise, I'd say the two modules are roughly comparable. For some
patterns one might be faster than the other.
DateTime::Format::Flexible
Author: THINC <https://metacpan.org/author/THINC>
One advantage of this over DateTime::Format::Natural is its time
zone support, e.g.:
yesterday 8pm UTC
yesterday 20:00 +0800
yesterday 20:00 Asia/Jakarta
Speed-wise, I'd say the two modules are roughly comparable. For some
patterns one might be faster than the other.
Date::Parse
Author: ATOOMIC <https://metacpan.org/author/ATOOMIC>
This module can parse several formats, but does not really fall into
"human date/time parser" as it lacks support for casual expression
like "yesterday" or 3 hours ago".
FAQ
% cpanm-cpanmodules -n Parse::HumanDate
Alternatively you can use the cpanmodules CLI (from App::cpanmodules
distribution):
% cpanmodules ls-entries Parse::HumanDate | cpanm -n
or Acme::CM::Get:
% perl -MAcme::CM::Get=Parse::HumanDate -E'say $_->{module} for @{ $LIST->{entries} }' | cpanm -n
or directly:
% perl -MAcme::CPANModules::Parse::HumanDate -E'say $_->{module} for @{ $Acme::CPANModules::Parse::HumanDate::LIST->{entries} }' | cpanm -n
This Acme::CPANModules module contains benchmark instructions. You can
run a benchmark for some/all the modules listed in this
Acme::CPANModules module using the bencher CLI (from Bencher
distribution):
% bencher --cpanmodules-module Parse::HumanDate
This Acme::CPANModules module also helps lcpan produce a more meaningful
result for "lcpan related-mods" command when it comes to finding related
lib/Acme/CPANModules/Parse/HumanDate.pm view on Meta::CPAN
module=>'DateTime::Format::Natural',
description => <<'_',
Compared to <pm:DateTime::Format::Flexible>, this module can also parse
duration in addition to date/time, e.g.:
2 years 3 months
And it also can extract the date expression from a longer string.
Speed-wise, I'd say the two modules are roughly comparable. For some patterns
one might be faster than the other.
_
bench_code_template => 'DateTime::Format::Natural->new->parse_datetime(<str>)',
},
{
module=>'DateTime::Format::Flexible',
description => <<'_',
One advantage of this over <pm:DateTime::Format::Natural> is its time zone
support, e.g.:
yesterday 8pm UTC
yesterday 20:00 +0800
yesterday 20:00 Asia/Jakarta
Speed-wise, I'd say the two modules are roughly comparable. For some patterns
one might be faster than the other.
_
bench_code_template => 'DateTime::Format::Flexible->new->parse_datetime(<str>)',
},
{
module => 'Date::Parse',
description => <<'_',
lib/Acme/CPANModules/Parse/HumanDate.pm view on Meta::CPAN
Author: L<SCHUBIGER|https://metacpan.org/author/SCHUBIGER>
Compared to L<DateTime::Format::Flexible>, this module can also parse
duration in addition to date/time, e.g.:
2 years 3 months
And it also can extract the date expression from a longer string.
Speed-wise, I'd say the two modules are roughly comparable. For some patterns
one might be faster than the other.
=item L<DateTime::Format::Flexible>
Author: L<THINC|https://metacpan.org/author/THINC>
One advantage of this over L<DateTime::Format::Natural> is its time zone
support, e.g.:
yesterday 8pm UTC
yesterday 20:00 +0800
yesterday 20:00 Asia/Jakarta
Speed-wise, I'd say the two modules are roughly comparable. For some patterns
one might be faster than the other.
=item L<Date::Parse>
Author: L<ATOOMIC|https://metacpan.org/author/ATOOMIC>
This module can parse several formats, but does not really fall into "human
date/time parser" as it lacks support for casual expression like "yesterday" or
3 hours ago".
lib/Acme/CPANModules/Parse/HumanDate.pm view on Meta::CPAN
% cpanm-cpanmodules -n Parse::HumanDate
Alternatively you can use the L<cpanmodules> CLI (from L<App::cpanmodules>
distribution):
% cpanmodules ls-entries Parse::HumanDate | cpanm -n
or L<Acme::CM::Get>:
% perl -MAcme::CM::Get=Parse::HumanDate -E'say $_->{module} for @{ $LIST->{entries} }' | cpanm -n
or directly:
% perl -MAcme::CPANModules::Parse::HumanDate -E'say $_->{module} for @{ $Acme::CPANModules::Parse::HumanDate::LIST->{entries} }' | cpanm -n
This Acme::CPANModules module contains benchmark instructions. You can run a
benchmark for some/all the modules listed in this Acme::CPANModules module using
the L<bencher> CLI (from L<Bencher> distribution):
% bencher --cpanmodules-module Parse::HumanDate
This Acme::CPANModules module also helps L<lcpan> produce a more meaningful
result for C<lcpan related-mods> command when it comes to finding related
modules for the modules listed in this Acme::CPANModules module.
( run in 0.944 second using v1.01-cache-2.11-cpan-d7a12ab2c7f )