://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
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
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
+
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
/
* 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
/
* 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
: 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
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
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
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
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
[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
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
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
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
[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,
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
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