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package DateTime::Infinite; { $DateTime::Infinite::VERSION = '0.78'; } use strict; use warnings; use DateTime; use DateTime::TimeZone; use base qw(DateTime); foreach my $m (qw( set set_time_zone truncate )) { no strict 'refs'; *{"DateTime::Infinite::$m"} = sub { return $_[0] }; } sub is_finite {0} sub is_infinite {1} sub _rd2ymd { return $_[2] ? ( $_[1] ) x 7 : ( $_[1] ) x 3; } sub _seconds_as_components { return ( $_[1] ) x 3; } sub _stringify { $_[0]->{utc_rd_days} == DateTime::INFINITY ? DateTime::INFINITY . '' : DateTime::NEG_INFINITY . ''; } sub STORABLE_freeze {return} sub STORABLE_thaw {return} package DateTime::Infinite::Future; { $DateTime::Infinite::Future::VERSION = '0.78'; } use base qw(DateTime::Infinite); { my $Pos = bless { utc_rd_days => DateTime::INFINITY, utc_rd_secs => DateTime::INFINITY, local_rd_days => DateTime::INFINITY, local_rd_secs => DateTime::INFINITY, rd_nanosecs => DateTime::INFINITY, tz => DateTime::TimeZone->new( name => 'floating' ), }, __PACKAGE__; $Pos->_calc_utc_rd; $Pos->_calc_local_rd; sub new {$Pos} } package DateTime::Infinite::Past; { $DateTime::Infinite::Past::VERSION = '0.78'; } use base qw(DateTime::Infinite); { my $Neg = bless { utc_rd_days => DateTime::NEG_INFINITY, utc_rd_secs => DateTime::NEG_INFINITY, local_rd_days => DateTime::NEG_INFINITY, local_rd_secs => DateTime::NEG_INFINITY, rd_nanosecs => DateTime::NEG_INFINITY, tz => DateTime::TimeZone->new( name => 'floating' ), }, __PACKAGE__; $Neg->_calc_utc_rd; $Neg->_calc_local_rd; sub new {$Neg} } 1; # ABSTRACT: Infinite past and future DateTime objects __END__ =pod =head1 NAME DateTime::Infinite - Infinite past and future DateTime objects =head1 VERSION version 0.78 =head1 SYNOPSIS my $future = DateTime::Infinite::Future->new(); my $past = DateTime::Infinite::Past->new(); =head1 DESCRIPTION This module provides two L<DateTime.pm|DateTime> subclasses, C<DateTime::Infinite::Future> and C<DateTime::Infinite::Past>. The objects are in the "floating" timezone, and this cannot be changed. =head1 BUGS There seem to be lots of problems when dealing with infinite numbers on Win32. This may be a problem with this code, Perl, or Win32's IEEE math implementation. Either way, the module may not be well-behaved on Win32 operating systems. =head1 METHODS The only constructor for these two classes is the C<new()> method, as shown in the L<SYNOPSIS|/SYNOPSIS>. This method takes no parameters. All "get" methods in this module simply return infinity, positive or negative. If the method is expected to return a string, it return the string representation of positive or negative infinity used by your system. For example, on my system calling C<year()> returns a number which when printed appears either "inf" or "-inf". The object is not mutable, so the C<set()>, C<set_time_zone()>, and C<truncate()> methods are all do-nothing methods that simply return the object they are called with. Obviously, the C<is_finite()> method returns false and the C<is_infinite()> method returns true. =head1 SEE ALSO datetime@perl.org mailing list http://datetime.perl.org/ =head1 AUTHOR Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org> =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is Copyright (c) 2012 by Dave Rolsky. This is free software, licensed under: The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible) =cut