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Date:      Mon, 27 Oct 2014 08:12:48 -0500
From:      "B. Estrade" <estrabd@gmail.com>
To:        Dan Langille <dan@langille.org>
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: perl isvaliddate function
Message-ID:  <CALSf6fS7-x0UL%2B4g3R9V412cL532uagBd_JVHLgDp8ZQOWWrJg@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <E7A7A52F-A54E-4D6D-BC2B-D349E228FCA4@langille.org>
References:  <4EA9EE9C-5049-4C50-B361-07F58FA19896@langille.org> <CALSf6fQ%2BiaXrz9bCe7mZEz8K%2BUsbG5jdgibueNK_dyhMUY2xdg@mail.gmail.com> <E7A7A52F-A54E-4D6D-BC2B-D349E228FCA4@langille.org>

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use POSIX qw/strftime/;

sub IsValidDate($) {
  my $string =3D shift;
  my ($year, $mon, $mday) =3D split /-/, $string;
  my $test =3D strftime("%Y-%m-%d", 0, 0, 0, $mday, $mon - 1, $year - 1900)=
;
  return ($test eq $string) ? $string : undef;
}

my $a =3D '2014-11-30 unless *coin ports remain unfixed';

if (IsValidDate($a)) {
  print "'$a' is a valid date\n";
} else {
  print "'$a' is NOT a valid date\n";
}

my $b =3D '2014-02-30';

if (IsValidDate($b)) {
  print "'$b' is a valid date\n";
} else {
  print "'$b' is NOT a valid date\n";
}

my $c =3D '2014-02-28';

if (IsValidDate($c)) {
  print "'$c' is a valid date\n";
} else {
  print "'$c' is NOT a valid date\n";
}


On Sat, Oct 25, 2014 at 2:50 PM, Dan Langille <dan@langille.org> wrote:

> On Oct 25, 2014, at 2:21 PM, B. Estrade <estrabd@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Looks fine to just get it working. If you wanted to be more efficient, =
I
> believe there is a way to use the core POSIX::strfmtime in a way that wou=
ld
> verify that the date you start with is the same date as the one returned
> after the format.  This core function is also very useful for date additi=
on
> and subtraction.
> >
> > I don't have time at this moment to create a proof of concept, but if
> you're interested let me know and I will when I have a minute.
>
> Yes, please, when you have time, please try that proof for me.  I would
> appreciate that.
>
> FYI: I believe all dates within the ports tree must be YYYY-MM-DD so usin=
g
> something like that would be useful.
>
> Comparing the starting date to the supplied date is good too, to catch
> edge cases like the first example.
>
> =E2=80=94
> Dan Langille
>
>



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