Bug#1012182: ITP: eluceo-ical -- PHP library to create iCal calendars and ICS files

2022-05-31 Thread Joseph Nahmias
://ical.poerschke.nrw/ * License : MIT Programming Lang: PHP Description : PHP library to create iCal calendars and ICS files This package offers a abstraction layer for creating iCalendars. The output will follow RFC 5545 as best as possible. The following components are supported

Bug#906853: ITP: tbsync -- [Thunderbird Add-On] Sync contacts, tasks and calendars to thunderbird. Currently supporting Exchange ActiveSync (EAS) and sabre/dav (CalDAV & CardDAV)

2018-08-21 Thread Mechtilde
Add-On] Sync contacts, tasks and calendars to thunderbird. Currently supporting Exchange ActiveSync (EAS) and sabre/dav (CalDAV & CardDAV) Synchronize Exchange ActiveSync accounts (contacts, tasks and calendars) to Thunderbird, supports Office 365, Outlook.com, Freenet, Strato, Hotmail, Ko

Bug#772689: ITP: jdcal -- Julian dates from proleptic Gregorian and Julian calendars

2014-12-09 Thread Yaroslav Halchenko
Description : Julian dates from proleptic Gregorian and Julian calendars This module contains functions for converting between Julian dates and calendar dates. . Different regions of the world switched to Gregorian calendar from Julian calendar on different dates. Having separate functions

Bug#612549: ITP: libical-parser-sax-perl -- generates SAX events calendars from iCalendars

2011-02-08 Thread Jonas Smedegaard
+ Programming Lang: Perl Description : generates SAX events calendars from iCalendars This Perl module, iCal::Parser::SAX, uses iCal::Parser to generate SAX events for the calendar contents. . The XML document generated is designed for creating monthly calendars with weeks beginning

Bug#575988: ITP: libdate-iso8601-perl -- Perl handling of the three ISO 8601 numerical calendars

2010-03-30 Thread Ivan Kohler
/ * License : Perl Programming Lang: Perl Description : Perl handling of the three ISO 8601 numerical calendars The international standard ISO 8601 Data elements and interchange formats - Information interchange - Representation of dates and times defines three distinct calendars

Bug#535528: ITP: libhtml-calendarmonthsimple-perl -- perl module for generating html calendars

2009-07-02 Thread Italo Valcy
/ * License : Unknown Programming Lang: Perl Description : perl module for generating html calendars 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

Bug#388607: ITP: python-htmlcalendar -- Python module for creating calendars in HTML format

2006-09-21 Thread Kevin Coyner
: LGPL Programming Lang: Python Description : Python module for creating calendars in HTML format Functions and classes for generating one-month and twelve-month calendars in HTML format with optional links. -- System Information: Debian Release: testing/unstable APT prefers unstable

Bug#190184: ITP: chandler -- personal information manager for email, calendars, contacts, tasks etc

2003-04-22 Thread Bas Zoetekouw
manager for email, calendars, contacts, tasks etc From the web site: Our product (code-named Chandler after the great detective novelist Raymond Chandler,) is a Personal Information Manager (PIM) intended for use in everyday information and communication tasks, such as composing and reading email

Re: Calendars

1997-06-29 Thread Shaya Potter
to share the (mis)understanding of the locations of political and national borders. This could under some circumstances be very insulting in unpredicted way. Thank you. I was talking about calendars, not about Israels blatant disregard for international law. This is NOT the place

Re: Calendars

1997-06-29 Thread joost witteveen
is a proper place to share the (mis)understanding of the locations of political and national borders. This could under some circumstances be very insulting in unpredicted way. Thank you. I was talking about calendars, not about Israels blatant disregard for international law

Re: Calendars

1997-06-29 Thread Shaya Potter
just don't think that debian-devel is a proper place to share the (mis)understanding of the locations of political and national borders. This could under some circumstances be very insulting in unpredicted way. Thank you. I was talking about calendars, not about

Re: Calendars

1997-06-28 Thread Kai Henningsen
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bruce Perens) wrote on 22.06.97 in [EMAIL PROTECTED]: From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Kai Henningsen) Not everyone switched in 1752. This is Pope Gregory's calendar reform, isn't it? I think it goes back a century or more before 1752. Actually, it probably was a bad idea to

Re: Calendars (was: Re: leap second)

1997-06-23 Thread Bruce Perens
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Kai Henningsen) Not everyone switched in 1752. This is Pope Gregory's calendar reform, isn't it? I think it goes back a century or more before 1752. Actually, it probably was a bad idea to use leap for both. Leap days are fixed by calendar design. Leap seconds are

Re: Calendars (was: Re: leap second)

1997-06-23 Thread Wayne Schlitt
In [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] (joost witteveen) writes: Now, we know the length of a year/day better, and only 1 in for of those turn-of-century years are leap years. Maybe that will change again. And about the seconds: we (currently, prossibly always) simply

Re: Calendars (was: Re: leap second)

1997-06-23 Thread Andreas Jellinghaus
On Jun 22, Bruce Perens wrote Speaking of predictability, isn't 2000 a leap year? The rule is different for the turn of the century. 2000/02/29 exists. (the rule is : every for years, but not every hundred years, but every 400 years). AFAIK. regards, andreas -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS

Calendars (was: Re: leap second)

1997-06-22 Thread Kai Henningsen
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bruce Perens) wrote on 21.06.97 in [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Someone wrote: This is completely unacceptable. OS time must be predictable. Run cal 9 1752 and tell me that. Consider it done. And now? (Besides, isn't that a bug in cal? Not everyone switched in 1752. In fact,

Re: Calendars (was: Re: leap second)

1997-06-22 Thread joost witteveen
Run cal 9 1752 and tell me that. [..] A more serious problem is that the current implementation doesn't allow for non-Christian date systems, of which there are several in active use. I'd expect that to be a problem for people in both parts of Jerusalem, for example. Does anybody