Recurring events library for ruby calendar applications
MIT License
Recurring events library for ruby calendar applications.
Cyclical lets you list recurring events with complex recurrence rules like "every 4 years, the first Tuesday after a Monday in November" in a simple way. The API is inspired by ice_cube and uses method chaining for natural rule specification.
You can find out if a given time matches the schedule, list event occurrences or add event duration and list suboccurrences in a given interval, which is handy when you need to trim event occurences to the interval (like rendering a day in a week view of a calendar with events crossing midnight).
Cyclical was originally extracted from a browser based calendar application and is written in ruby. There is a JavaScript implementation of Cyclical supporting the same features, intended as a front-end counterpart. You can pass data between the implementations using the built-in JSON serialization.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'cyclical'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install cyclical
The central thing in Cyclical is the Schedule
. Let's take the example of U.S. Presidential Election day from RFC 5545:
include Cyclical
date = Time.local(1997, 8, 2, 9, 0, 0)
schedule = Schedule.new date, Rule.yearly(4).month(11).weekday(:tue).monthdays(2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
election_dates = schedule.first(3);
Each schedule has a base date
and a recurrence rule. The four supported rules are:
with corresponding factory methods on Rule
. The factory methods take a single argument - the repetition interval.
The basic recurrence rule matches the original date, i.e. for a yearly rule, the occurences will always happen on the same date. To specify a more complex pattern, you can use filters.
Filters replace the single value (day, month) with a set of values that match. For example, instead of only matching the day of month in of the base date, with the monthdays
filter, you can match multiple month days.
Available filters are:
Each filter methord takes variable arguments containing integers or string (incl. shortcuts) for a given date component.
You can limit the schedule either by a number of events (using the count
method) or an end date (using the stop
method).
TODO. See lib/cyclical/schedule.rb
TODO. See lib/cyclical/schedule.rb
TODO. See RFC 5545 examples in spec/schedule_spec.rb
Cyclical is released under the MIT License.