Hm.  Thanks, but it looks like that's all in Python.  I'm not a parcel tongue 
so that wouldn't be much use to me in a PHP app. :-)  Thanks though.

--Larry Garfield

On Tuesday 25 May 2010 06:43:30 pm Jason Pruim wrote:
> Hi Larry,
> 
> Take a look at: http://trac.calendarserver.org/
> 
> It's Apple's open source page which includes their iCal web server...
> Maybe something can be pulled from that?  Just something to think
> about and see if it helps :)
> 
> Also... Not sure if you've looked at the CalDav protocol but that is
> what it basically runs off of so if you haven't checked it out, you
> might get some better results :)
> 
> On May 25, 2010, at 2:10 PM, la...@garfieldtech.com wrote:
> > Hi folks.  I am looking for a good iCal processing library (open
> > source / GPL compatible).  Unfortunately, everything I've been able
> > to find so far is half-assed, incomplete, buggy, or so horribly
> > designed that I'd be embarrassed to use it (or several of the
> > above).  I was hoping someone could recommend one that actually
> > works.  I'd prefer an OO interface as it seems a natural fit, but at
> > this point I'll settle for whatever works.
> >
> > I am not looking for an application with UI and form integration and
> > stuff.  I just want a working stand-alone parser.  (If it can be
> > ripped out of something more complete, that's fine.)
> >
> > My needs:
> > 1) Given raw data (provided by a user form that I can already
> > handle), construct iCal VEVENT information including RRULEs and
> > EXRULEs.
> > 2) Given a VCALENDAR / VEVENT object, generate the appropriate iCal
> > text string that I can write to a file or return to the browser with
> > the appropriate mime header.
> > 3) Given a VCALENDAR / VEVENT object with RRULEs and EXRULEs in it,
> > be able to say "give me the start/end dates of the next X
> > occurrences from some date" or "give me all the start/end dates of
> > occurrences until date Y".
> >
> > What I've found so far:
> >
> > http://www.kigkonsult.se/iCalcreator/ - This is the best I've found
> > so far, and it's what I'm using now.  It's missing requirement #3,
> > though, as near as I can tell.  Actually if I could add that
> > functionality to it without too much trouble I'd probably stick with
> > it, but it's non-trivial functionality.  It's also PHP 4 OO, but I
> > can deal.
> >
> > http://phpicalendar.net/ - This claims to do #3, I think, but it's
> > integrated into a web app.  The code for it is also horrific, as the
> > entire parser is build on include files that rely on global
> > variables without using any functions.  The security implications of
> > that alone scare me to death to say nothing of side effects and
> > stability.
> >
> > http://code.google.com/p/qcal/ - Documentation is sorely lacking, as
> > it is listed as "pre-alpha, real alpha to be released in January".
> > That post was made in December, and there's still no "real
> > alpha". :-)  So I can't really tell if it does what I need or not.
> >
> > A quick search turned up nothing in PEAR, and Zend Framework has
> > only a proposal from 2 years ago, not an actual library.
> >
> > Any others I don't know about?  This seems like an area that cries
> > out for a good standard library, but as of yet I haven't found one
> > that works.  Help or pointers would be much appreciated.
> >
> > --Larry Garfield
> 

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