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NAME

       zsh-betacalsys - zsh calendar system

DESCRIPTION

       The shell is supplied with a series of functions to replace and enhance
       the traditional Unix  calendar  programme,  which  warns  the  user  of
       imminent  or  future events, details of which are stored in a text file
       (typically  calendar  in  the  user's  home  directory).   The  version
       provided  here includes a mechanism for alerting the user when an event
       is due.

       In addition a function age is provided that  can  be  used  in  a  glob
       qualifier;  it  allows files to be selected based on their modification
       times.

       The format of the calendar file and the dates used there in and in  the
       age function are described first, then the functions that can be called
       to examine and modify the calendar file.

       The functions here depend  on  the  availability  of  the  zsh/datetime
       module which is usually installed with the shell.  The library function
       strptime() must be available; it is present on  most  recent  operating
       systems.

FILE AND DATE FORMATS

   Calendar File Format
       The  calendar file is by default ~/calendar.  This can be configured by
       the calendar-file style, see  the  section  STYLES  below.   The  basic
       format  consists  of  a  series of separate lines, with no indentation,
       each including a date and time specification followed by a  description
       of the event.

       Various  enhancements to this format are supported, based on the syntax
       of Emacs calendar mode.  An indented line indicates a continuation line
       that  continues  the  description  of the event from the preceding line
       (note the date may not be continued in this way).  An initial ampersand
       (&) is ignored for compatibility.

       An  indented  line  on which the first non-whitespace character is # is
       not displayed with  the  calendar  entry,  but  is  still  scanned  for
       information.   This  can  be  used  to  hide  information useful to the
       calendar system but not to the user, such as the unique identifier used
       by calendar_add.

       The  Emacs  extension  that  a  date with no description may refer to a
       number of succeeding events at different times is not supported.

       Unless the done-file style has been altered, any events which have been
       processed  are  appended to the file with the same name as the calendar
       file with the suffix .done, hence ~/calendar.done by default.

       An example is shown below.

   Date Format
       The format of the date  and  time  is  designed  to  allow  flexibility
       without  admitting  ambiguity.   (The  words `date' and `time' are both
       used in the documentation below; except where specifically  noted  this
       implies   a   string   that   may  include  both  a  date  and  a  time
       specification.)  Note that there is no localization support; month  and
       day  names  must  be  in  English  and  separator characters are fixed.
       Matching is case insensitive, and only the first three letters  of  the
       names  are  significant,  although  as  a special case a form beginning
       "month" does not match  "Monday".   Furthermore,  time  zones  are  not
       handled; all times are assumed to be local.

       It  is  recommended  that, rather than exploring the intricacies of the
       system, users find a date format that is natural to them and  stick  to
       it.   This  will avoid unexpected effects.  Various key facts should be
       noted.

       o      In particular, note the  confusion  between  month/day/year  and
              day/month/year  when  the month is numeric; these formats should
              be avoided if at all possible.  Many alternatives are available.

       o      The  year  must  be  given  in full to avoid confusion, and only
              years from 1900 to 2099 inclusive are matched.

       The following give some obvious examples; users finding here  a  format
       they  like  and  not  subject  to  vagaries  of style may skip the full
       description.  As dates and times are matched  separately  (even  though
       the  time  may  be  embedded in the date), any date format may be mixed
       with any format for the time of day provide the  separators  are  clear
       (whitespace, colons, commas).

              2007/04/03 13:13
              2007/04/03:13:13
              2007/04/03 1:13 pm
              3rd April 2007, 13:13
              April 3rd 2007 1:13 p.m.
              Apr 3, 2007 13:13
              Tue Apr 03 13:13:00 2007
              13:13 2007/apr/3

       More detailed rules follow.

       Times  are  parsed and extracted before dates.  They must use colons to
       separate hours and minutes, though a dot is allowed before  seconds  if
       they are present.  This limits time formats to the following:

       o      HH:MM[:SS[.FFFFF]] [am|pm|a.m.|p.m.]

       o      HH:MM.SS[.FFFFF] [am|pm|a.m.|p.m.]

       Here,   square  brackets  indicate  optional  elements,  possibly  with
       alternatives.  Fractions of a second are recognised but  ignored.   For
       absolute  times (the normal format require by the calendar file and the
       age function) a date is mandatory but a time of day is  not;  the  time
       returned  is  at  the  start of the date.  One variation is allowed: if
       a.m. or p.m. or one of their variants is present,  an  hour  without  a
       minute is allowed, e.g. 3 p.m..

       Time  zones  are not handled, though if one is matched following a time
       specification it will be removed to allow  a  surrounding  date  to  be
       parsed.   This  only  happens  if the format of the timezone is not too
       unusual.  The following are examples of forms that are understood:

              +0100
              GMT
              GMT-7
              CET+1CDT

       Any part of the timezone that is not numeric must  have  exactly  three
       capital letters in the name.

       Dates  suffer from the ambiguity between DD/MM/YYYY and MM/DD/YYYY.  It
       is recommended this form is avoided with purely numeric dates, but  use
       of ordinals, eg. 3rd/04/2007, will resolve the ambiguity as the ordinal
       is always parsed as the day of the month.  Years must  be  four  digits
       (and  the  first  two  must  be  19 or 20); 03/04/08 is not recognised.
       Other numbers may have leading zeroes, but they are not required.   The
       following are handled:

       o      YYYY/MM/DD

       o      YYYY-MM-DD

       o      YYYY/MNM/DD

       o      YYYY-MNM-DD

       o      DD[th|st|rd] MNM[,] [ YYYY ]

       o      MNM DD[th|st|rd][,] [ YYYY ]

       o      DD[th|st|rd]/MM[,] YYYY

       o      DD[th|st|rd]/MM/YYYY

       o      MM/DD[th|st|rd][,] YYYY

       o      MM/DD[th|st|rd]/YYYY

       Here,  MNM is at least the first three letters of a month name, matched
       case-insensitively.  The remainder of the month name may appear but its
       contents  are  irrelevant,  so  janissary,  febrile,  martial, apricot,
       maybe, junta, etc. are happily handled.

       Where the year is shown as  optional,  the  current  year  is  assumed.
       There  are  only  two  such cases, the form Jun 20 or 14 September (the
       only two commonly occurring forms, apart from a "the" in some forms  of
       English,  which  isn't currently supported).  Such dates will of course
       become ambiguous in the future, so should ideally be avoided.

       Times may follow dates with a colon, e.g. 1965/07/12:09:45; this is  in
       order  to  provide a format with no whitespace.  A comma and whitespace
       are allowed, e.g. 1965/07/12, 09:45.   Currently  the  order  of  these
       separators  is  not checked, so illogical formats such as 1965/07/12, :
       ,09:45 will also be matched.  For simplicity such  variations  are  not
       shown in the list above.  Otherwise, a time is only recognised as being
       associated with a date if there is only whitespace in  between,  or  if
       the time was embedded in the date.

       Days  of the week are not normally scanned, but will be ignored if they
       occur at the start of the date  pattern  only.   However,  in  contexts
       where it is useful to specify dates relative to today, days of the week
       with no other date specification may be given.  The day is  assumed  to
       be  either  today  or  within  the  past  week.   Likewise,  the  words
       yesterday,  today  and  tomorrow  are   handled.    All   matches   are
       case-insensitive.   Hence if today is Monday, then Sunday is equivalent
       to yesterday, Monday is equivalent to today, but Tuesday gives  a  date
       six  days  ago.  This is not generally useful within the calendar file.
       Dates in this format may be combined with  a  time  specification;  for
       example Tomorrow, 8 p.m..

       For example, the standard date format:

              Fri Aug 18 17:00:48 BST 2006

       is  handled  by  matching  HH:MM:SS  and  removing it together with the
       matched (but unused) time zone.  This leaves the following:

              Fri Aug 18 2006

       Fri is ignored and the rest is matched according to the standard rules.

   Relative Time Format
       In  certain  places  relative  times  are handled.  Here, a date is not
       allowed;  instead  a  combination  of  various  supported  periods  are
       allowed,  together with an optional time.  The periods must be in order
       from most to least significant.

       In some cases, a more accurate calculation is possible when there is an
       anchor  date:   offsets of months or years pick the correct day, rather
       than being rounded, and it is possible to pick a particular  day  in  a
       month as `(1st Friday)', etc., as described in more detail below.

       Anchors  are available in the following cases.  If one or two times are
       passed to the function calendar, the start time acts an anchor for  the
       end  time  when  the  end  time  is relative (even if the start time is
       implicit).  When examining calendar files, the  scheduled  event  being
       examined  anchors the warning time when it is given explicitly by means
       of the WARN keyword; likewise, the scheduled event anchors a repetition
       period  when  given  by the RPT keyword, so that specifications such as
       RPT 2 months, 3rd Thursday  are  handled  properly.   Finally,  the  -R
       argument  to calendar_scandate directly provides an anchor for relative
       calculations.

       The periods handled, with possible abbreviations are:

       Years  years, yrs, ys, year, yr, y, yearly.   A  year  is  365.25  days
              unless there is an anchor.

       Months months, mons, mnths, mths, month, mon, mnth, mth, monthly.  Note
              that m, ms, mn, mns are ambiguous and are not handled.  A  month
              is a period of 30 days rather than a calendar month unless there
              is an anchor.

       Weeks  weeks, wks, ws, week, wk, w, weekly

       Days   days, dys, ds, day, dy, d, daily

       Hours  hours, hrs, hs, hour, hr, h, hourly

       Minutes
              minutes, mins, minute, min, but not m, ms, mn or mns

       Seconds
              seconds, secs, ss, second, sec, s

       Spaces between the numbers  are  optional,  but  are  required  between
       items, although a comma may be used (with or without spaces).

       The  forms  yearly  to  hourly  allow  the  number to be omitted; it is
       assumed to be 1.  For example, 1 d and daily are equivalent.  Note that
       using  those forms with plurals is confusing; 2 yearly is the same as 2
       years, not twice yearly, so it is recommended they only be used without
       numbers.

       When an anchor time is present, there is an extension to handle regular
       events  in  the  form  of  the  nth  someday  of  the  month.   Such  a
       specification   must   occur  immediately  after  any  year  and  month
       specification, but before any time of day, and  must  be  in  the  form
       n(th|st|rd)  day,  for  example 1st Tuesday or 3rd Monday.  As in other
       places, days are matched case insensitively, must be  in  English,  and
       only  the  first  three  letters  are  significant  except  that a form
       beginning `month' does not match  `Monday'.   No  attempt  is  made  to
       sanitize  the  resulting date; attempts to squeeze too many occurrences
       into a month will push the day into the next month (but in the  obvious
       fashion, retaining the correct day of the week).

       Here are some examples:

              30 years 3 months 4 days 3:42:41
              14 days 5 hours
              Monthly, 3rd Thursday
              4d,10hr

   Example
       Here is an example calendar file.  It uses a consistent date format, as
       recommended above.

              Feb 1, 2006 14:30 Pointless bureaucratic meeting
              Mar 27, 2006 11:00 Mutual recrimination and finger pointing
                Bring water pistol and waterproofs
              Mar 31, 2006 14:00 Very serious managerial pontification
                # UID 12C7878A9A50
              Apr 10, 2006 13:30 Even more pointless blame assignment exercise WARN 30 mins
              May 18, 2006 16:00 Regular moaning session RPT monthly, 3rd Thursday

       The second entry has a  continuation  line.   The  third  entry  has  a
       continuation  line  that will not be shown when the entry is displayed,
       but the unique identifier will be used  by  the  calendar_add  function
       when  updating  the  event.  The fourth entry will produce a warning 30
       minutes  before  the  event   (to   allow   you   to   equip   yourself
       appropriately).   The  fifth  entry  repeats  after  a month on the 3rd
       Thursday, i.e. June 15, 2006, at the same time.

USER FUNCTIONS

       This section  describes  functions  that  are  designed  to  be  called
       directly  by  the  user.   The  first  part  describes  those functions
       associated with the user's calendar; the second part describes the  use
       in glob qualifiers.

   Calendar system functions
       calendar  [  -abdDsv  ]  [  -C calfile ] [ -n num ] [ -S showprog ] [ [
       start ] end ](
       calendar  -r  [  -abdDrsv ] [ -C calfile ] [ -n num ] [ -S showprog ] [
       start ]
              Show events in the calendar.

              With no arguments, show events from the start of today until the
              end of the next working day after today.   In  other  words,  if
              today  is Friday, Saturday, or Sunday, show up to the end of the
              following Monday, otherwise show today and tomorrow.

              If end is given, show events from the start of today up  to  the
              time  and  date  given,  which is in the format described in the
              previous section.  Note that if this  is  a  date  the  time  is
              assumed  to  be  midnight  at  the  start  of  the date, so that
              effectively this shows all events before the given date.

              end may start with a +, in  which  case  the  remainder  of  the
              specification  is  a  relative  time  format as described in the
              previous section indicating the range of  time  from  the  start
              time that is to be included.

              If  start is also given, show events starting from that time and
              date.  The word now can be used to indicate the current time.

              To implement an alert when events are due, include  calendar  -s
              in your ~/.zshrc file.

              Options:

              -a     Show  all  items in the calendar, regardless of the start
                     and end.

              -b     Brief:  don't display continuation lines  (i.e.  indented
                     lines  following  the  line with the date/time), just the
                     first line.

              -B lines
                     Brief: display at most  the  first  lines  lines  of  the
                     calendar entry.  `-B 1' is equivalent to `-b'.

              -C calfile
                     Explicitly  specify  a calendar file instead of the value
                     of the calendar-file style or the the default ~/calendar.

              -d     Move  any  events that have passed from the calendar file
                     to the "done" file, as given by the  done-file  style  or
                     the  default  which  is  the  calendar  file  with  .done
                     appended.  This option is implied by the -s option.

              -D     Turns off the option -d, even if the -s  option  is  also
                     present.

              -n num, -num
                     Show  at  least  num  events,  if present in the calendar
                     file, regardless of the start and end.

              -r     Show all the remaining options in the calendar,  ignoring
                     the  given  end  time.   The start time is respected; any
                     argument given is treated as a start time.

              -s     Use the shell's sched command to schedule a  timed  event
                     that  will warn the user when an event is due.  Note that
                     the sched command  only  runs  if  the  shell  is  at  an
                     interactive   prompt;   a   foreground  task  blocks  the
                     scheduled task from running until it is finished.

                     The timed event usually runs the programme  calendar_show
                     to  show  the  event, as described in the section UTILITY
                     FUNCTIONS below.

                     By default, a warning of the event is shown five  minutes
                     before  it  is due.  The warning period can be configured
                     by the style warn-time or for a single calendar entry  by
                     including  WARN  reltime  in the first line of the entry,
                     where reltime is one of the usual relative time  formats.

                     A  repeated  event  may  be  indicated  by  including RPT
                     reldate in the  first  line  of  the  entry.   After  the
                     scheduled  event has been displayed it will be re-entered
                     into the calendar  file  at  a  time  reldate  after  the
                     existing event.  Note that this is currently the only use
                     made of the repeat count, so that it is not  possible  to
                     query  the  schedule  for a recurrence of an event in the
                     calendar until the previous event has passed.

                     If RPT is used, it  is  also  possible  to  specify  that
                     certain  recurrences  of  an  event  are  rescheduled  or
                     cancelled.  This is done  with  the  OCCURRENCE  keyword,
                     followed  by  whitespace  and  the  date  and time of the
                     occurrence  in  the   regular   sequence,   followed   by
                     whitespace   and   either   the  date  and  time  of  the
                     rescheduled event or the exact string CANCELLED.  In this
                     case  the date and time must be in exactly the "date with
                     local time" format used by the  text/calendar  MIME  type
                     (RFC   2445),   <YYYY><MM><DD>T<hh><mm><ss>   (note   the
                     presence of the literal character  T).   The  first  word
                     (the  regular  recurrence)  may be something other than a
                     proper date/time to indicate that the event is additional
                     to  the  normal  sequence;  a convention that retains the
                     formatting appearance is XXXXXXXXTXXXXXX.

                     Furthermore, it is useful  to  record  the  next  regular
                     recurrence  (as  then  the  displayed  date  may be for a
                     rescheduled event so cannot be used for  calculating  the
                     regular sequence).  This is specified by RECURRENCE and a
                     time or date in the same format.  calendar_add adds  such
                     an  indication  when it encounters a recurring event that
                     does not include one, based on the headline date/time.

                     If calendar_add is used to  update  occurrences  the  UID
                     keyword  described  there  should  be present in both the
                     existing entry and  the  added  occurrence  in  order  to
                     identify recurring event sequences.

                     For example,

                             Thu May 6, 2010 11:00 Informal chat RPT 1 week
                               # RECURRENCE 20100506T110000
                               # OCCURRENCE 20100513T110000 20100513T120000
                               # OCCURRENCE 20100520T110000 CANCELLED

                     The  event  that  occurs  at  11:00  on  13th May 2010 is
                     rescheduled an hour later.  The event that occurs a  week
                     later  is  cancelled.   The  occurrences  are  given on a
                     continuation line starting with a # character so will not
                     usually be displayed as part of the event.  As elsewhere,
                     no account of time zones is taken with the  times.  After
                     the next event occurs the headline date/time will be `Thu
                     May 13, 2010 12:00' while the RECURRENCE  date/time  will
                     be  `20100513T110000'  (note  that  cancelled  and  moved
                     events are not taken account of in the RECURRENCE,  which
                     records what the next regular recurrence is, but they are
                     accounted for in the headline date/time).

                     It is safe to run calendar -s to reschedule  an  existing
                     event  (if  the  calendar file has changed, for example),
                     and also to have it running in multiples instances of the
                     shell since the calendar file is locked when in use.

                     By  default, expired events are moved to the "done" file;
                     see the -d option.  Use -D to prevent this.

              -S showprog
                     Explicitly specify a programme to  be  used  for  showing
                     events instead of the value of the show-prog style or the
                     default calendar_show.

              -v     Verbose:   show  more   information   about   stages   of
                     processing.   This  is  useful  for  confirming  that the
                     function  has  successfully  parsed  the  dates  in   the
                     calendar file.

       calendar_add [ -BL ] event ...
              Adds a single event to the calendar in the appropriate location.
              The event can  contain  multiple  lines,  as  described  in  the
              section Calendar File Format above.  Using this function ensures
              that the calendar file is sorted in date  and  time  order.   It
              also makes special arrangements for locking the file while it is
              altered.  The old calendar is left in a  file  with  the  suffix
              .old.

              The  option  -B indicates that backing up the calendar file will
              be handled  by  the  caller  and  should  not  be  performed  by
              calendar_add.   The  option  -L indicates that calendar_add does
              not need to lock the calendar file  as  it  is  already  locked.
              These options will not usually be needed by users.

              If the style reformat-date is true, the date and time of the new
              entry will be rewritten into the standard date format:  see  the
              descriptions of this style and the style date-format.

              The  function can use a unique identifier stored with each event
              to ensure that updates to existing events are treated correctly.
              The  entry  should contain the word UID, followed by whitespace,
              followed by a word consisting entirely of hexadecimal digits  of
              arbitrary  length (all digits are significant, including leading
              zeroes).  As the UID is not directly useful to the user,  it  is
              convenient  to hide it on an indented continuation line starting
              with a #, for example:

                     Aug 31, 2007 09:30  Celebrate the end of the holidays
                       # UID 045B78A0

              The second line will not be shown by the calendar function.

              It is possible to specify the RPT keyword followed by  CANCELLED
              instead  of  a  relative time.  This causes any matched event or
              series of events to be cancelled (the original  event  does  not
              have  to be marked as recurring in order to be cancelled by this
              method).  A UID is required in order to match an existing  event
              in the calendar.

              calendar_add  will attempt to manage recurrences and occurrences
              of  repeating  events  as  described  for  event  scheduling  by
              calendar  -s  above.   To  reschedule  or  cancel a single event
              calendar_add should be called with an entry  that  includes  the
              correct  UID  but  does  not  include the RPT keyword as this is
              taken to mean the entry applies to a series of repeating  events
              and  hence  replaces all existing information.  Each rescheduled
              or cancelled occurrence must have an OCCURRENCE keyword  in  the
              entry  passed  to  calendar_add  which  will  be merged into the
              calendar file.  Any existing  reference  to  the  occurrence  is
              replaced.  An occurrence that does not refer to a valid existing
              event is added as a one-off  occurrence  to  the  same  calendar
              entry.

       calendar_edit
              This  calls  the  user's  editor  to edit the calendar file.  If
              there are arguments, they are taken as the editor  to  use  (the
              file name is appended to the commands); otherwise, the editor is
              given by the variable VISUAL, if set, else the variable  EDITOR.

              If  the  calendar  scheduler was running, then after editing the
              file calendar -s is called to update it.

              This function locks out the calendar  system  during  the  edit.
              Hence  it  should  be used to edit the calendar file if there is
              any possibility of a calendar event occurring  meanwhile.   Note
              this  can  lead to another shell with calendar functions enabled
              hanging waiting for a lock, so  it  is  necessary  to  quit  the
              editor as soon as possible.

       calendar_parse calendar-entry
              This  is  the  internal  function  that  analyses the parts of a
              calendar entry, which is  passed  as  the  only  argument.   The
              function returns status 1 if the argument could not be parsed as
              a calendar entry and status 2 if the wrong number  of  arguments
              were  passed;  it  also  sets  the  parameter  reply to an empty
              associative array.  Otherwise, it  returns  status  0  and  sets
              elements of the associative array reply as follows:
       time   The   time   as  a  string  of  digits  in  the  same  units  as
              $EPOCHSECONDS
       schedtime
              The regularly scheduled time.  This may differ from  the  actual
              event  time  time  if  this  is  a  recurring event and the next
              occurrence has been rescheduled.  Then  time  gives  the  actual
              time  and  schedtime  the  time of the regular recurrence before
              modification.
       text1  The text from the line not including the date and  time  of  the
              event, but including any WARN or RPT keywords and values.
       warntime
              Any warning time given by the WARN keyword as a string of digits
              containing the time at which  to  warn  in  the  same  units  as
              $EPOCHSECONDS.  (Note this is an absolute time, not the relative
              time passed down.)  Not set  no  WARN  keyword  and  value  were
              matched.
       warnstr
              The raw string matched after the WARN keyword, else unset.
       rpttime
              Any  recurrence  time  given  by  the RPT keyword as a string of
              digits containing the time of the recurrence in the  same  units
              as  $EPOCHSECONDS.  (Note this is an absolute time.)  Not set if
              no RPT keyword and value were matched.
       schedrpttime
              The next regularly scheduled occurrence  of  a  recurring  event
              before modification.  This may differ from rpttime, which is the
              actual time of the event that may have been rescheduled from the
              regular time.
       rptstr The raw string matched after the RPT keyword, else unset.
       text2  The  text  from  the  line  after  removal  of  the date and any
              keywords and values.  )

       calendar_showdate [ -r ] [ -f fmt ] date-spec ...
              The given date-spec is interpreted and  the  corresponding  date
              and time printed.  If the initial date-spec begins with a + or -
              it is treated as relative to the current time; date-specs  after
              the  first are treated as relative to the date calculated so far
              and a leading + is optional in that case.  This  allows  one  to
              use   the   system   as   a   date   calculator.   For  example,
              calendar_showdate '+1 month, 1st Friday' shows the date  of  the
              first Friday of next month.

              With  the option -r nothing is printed but the value of the date
              and time in seconds since the epoch is stored in  the  parameter
              REPLY.

              With  the option -f fmt the given date/time conversion format is
              passed to strftime; see notes on the date-format style below.

              In  order  to  avoid  ambiguity  with  negative  relative   date
              specifications,  options  must occur in separate words; in other
              words, -r and -f should not be combined in the same word.

       calendar_sort
              Sorts the calendar file into date and  time  order.     The  old
              calendar is left in a file with the suffix .old.

   Glob qualifiers
       The function age can be autoloaded and use separately from the calendar
       system, although  it  uses  the  function  calendar_scandate  for  date
       formatting.   It  requires  the  zsh/stat  builtin,  but  uses only the
       builtin zstat.

       age selects files having a given modification time for use  as  a  glob
       qualifier.   The  format  of the date is the same as that understood by
       the calendar system, described in the section  FILE  AND  DATE  FORMATS
       above.

       The  function  can  take  one  or  two arguments, which can be supplied
       either directly  as  command  or  arguments,  or  separately  as  shell
       parameters.

              print *(e:age 2006/10/04 2006/10/09:)

       The example above matches all files modified between the start of those
       dates.  The second  argument  may  alternatively  be  a  relative  time
       introduced by a +:

              print *(e:age 2006/10/04 +5d:)

       The example above is equivalent to the previous example.

       In  addition  to  the  special  use  of  days  of  the  week, today and
       yesterday, times with no date may be specified; these apply  to  today.
       Obviously such uses become problematic around midnight.

              print *(e-age 12:00 13:30-)

       The example above shows files modified between 12:00 and 13:00 today.

              print *(e:age 2006/10/04:)

       The  example  above  matches  all  files modified on that date.  If the
       second argument is omitted it is taken to be exactly 24 hours after the
       first argument (even if the first argument contains a time).

              print *(e-age 2006/10/04:10:15 2006/10/04:10:45-)

       The example above supplies times.  Note that whitespace within the time
       and date specification must  be  quoted  to  ensure  age  receives  the
       correct  arguments,  hence  the use of the additional colon to separate
       the date and time.

              AGEREF1=2006/10/04:10:15
              AGEREF2=2006/10/04:10:45
              print *(+age)

       This shows the same example  before  using  another  form  of  argument
       passing.   The  dates  and  times in the parameters AGEREF1 and AGEREF2
       stay in effect until unset, but will be overridden if any  argument  is
       passed  as  an  explicit argument to age.  Any explicit argument causes
       both parameters to be ignored.

STYLES

       The zsh style mechanism using the zstyle command is  describe  in  zsh-
       betamodules(1).   This  is  the  same  mechanism used in the completion
       system.

       The styles below are all examined in the  context  :datetime:function:,
       for example :datetime:calendar:.

       calendar-file
              The location of the main calendar.  The default is ~/calendar.

       date-format
              A   strftime  format  string  (see  strftime(3))  with  the  zsh
              extensions providing various numbers with  no  leading  zero  or
              space  if  the  number  is  a  single digit as described for the
              %D{string} prompt format in  the  section  EXPANSION  OF  PROMPT
              SEQUENCES in zsh-betamisc(1).

              This  is  used for outputting dates in calendar, both to support
              the -v option and when  adding  recurring  events  back  to  the
              calendar  file,  and  in  calendar_showdate  as the final output
              format.

              If the style is  not  set,  the  default  used  is  similar  the
              standard system format as output by the date command (also known
              as `ctime format'): `%a %b %d %H:%M:%S %Z %Y'.

       done-file
              The location of the file to which events which have  passed  are
              appended.   The  default  is the calendar file location with the
              suffix .done.  The style may be set to an empty string in  which
              case a "done" file will not be maintained.

       reformat-date
              Boolean, used by calendar_add.  If it is true, the date and time
              of new entries added to the calendar will be reformatted to  the
              format  given by the style date-format or its default.  Only the
              date and time of the event itself is reformatted; any subsidiary
              dates and times such as those associated with repeat and warning
              times are left alone.

       show-prog
              The programme run by calendar for showing events.   It  will  be
              passed  the  start time and stop time of the events requested in
              seconds since the epoch followed by the event text.   Note  that
              calendar -s uses a start time and stop time equal to one another
              to indicate alerts for specific events.

              The default is the function calendar_show.

       warn-time
              The time before an event at which a warning will  be  displayed,
              if  the  first line of the event does not include the text EVENT
              reltime.  The default is 5 minutes.

UTILITY FUNCTIONS

       calendar_lockfiles
              Attempt to lock the files given in  the  argument.   To  prevent
              problems  with  network  file  locking this is done in an ad hoc
              fashion by attempting to create a symbolic link to the file with
              the  name  file.lockfile.   No  other system level functions are
              used for locking, i.e. the file can be accessed and modified  by
              any  utility  that  does not use this mechanism.  In particular,
              the user is not prevented from editing the calendar file at  the
              same time unless calendar_edit is used.

              Three  attempts  are made to lock the file before giving up.  If
              the module zsh/zselect is available, the times of  the  attempts
              are  jittered so that multiple instances of the calling function
              are unlikely to retry at the same time.

              The files locked are appended  to  the  array  lockfiles,  which
              should be local to the caller.

              If  all files were successfully locked, status zero is returned,
              else status one.

              This function may be used as a general  file  locking  function,
              although  this  will only work if only this mechanism is used to
              lock files.

       calendar_read
              This is a backend used by various other functions to  parse  the
              calendar  file, which is passed as the only argument.  The array
              calendar_entries is set to the list of events in  the  file;  no
              pruning  is  done  except  that  ampersands are removed from the
              start of the line.  Each entry may contain multiple lines.

       calendar_scandate
              This is a generic function to parse dates and times that may  be
              used  separately  from  the  calendar system.  The argument is a
              date or time specification as described in the section FILE  AND
              DATE FORMATS above.  The parameter REPLY is set to the number of
              seconds since the epoch corresponding to that date or time.   By
              default,  the  date and time may occur anywhere within the given
              argument.

              Returns status zero if  the  date  and  time  were  successfully
              parsed, else one.

              Options:
              -a     The  date  and  time  are  anchored  to  the start of the
                     argument; they will not be matched if there is  preceding
                     text.

              -A     The  date and time are anchored to both the start and end
                     of the argument; they will not be matched if the  is  any
                     other text in the argument.

              -d     Enable additional debugging output.

              -m     Minus.   When  -R  anchor_time is also given the relative
                     time is calculated backwards from anchor_time.

              -r     The argument passed is to be parsed as a relative time.

              -R anchor_time
                     The argument passed is to be parsed as a  relative  time.
                     The  time  is  relative to anchor_time, a time in seconds
                     since the epoch, and the returned value is  the  absolute
                     time   corresponding  to  advancing  anchor_time  by  the
                     relative time given.  This allows lengths of months to be
                     correctly  taken into account.  If the final day does not
                     exist in the given month, the last day of the final month
                     is given.  For example, if the anchor time is during 31st
                     January 2007 and the relative time is 1 month, the  final
                     time is the same time of day during 28th February 2007.

              -s     In addition to setting REPLY, set REPLY2 to the remainder
                     of the  argument  after  the  date  and  time  have  been
                     stripped.  This is empty if the option -A was given.

              -t     Allow  a  time  with  no date specification.  The date is
                     assumed to be today.  The behaviour is unspecified if the
                     iron tongue of midnight is tolling twelve.

       calendar_show
              The  function  used  by default to display events.  It accepts a
              start time and end time for events, both in epoch  seconds,  and
              an event description.

              The  event is always printed to standard output.  If the command
              line editor is active (which  will  usually  be  the  case)  the
              command line will be redisplayed after the output.

              If  the parameter DISPLAY is set and the start and end times are
              the same (indicating a scheduled event), the function  uses  the
              command xmessage to display a window with the event details.

BUGS

       As  the  system  is  based  entirely  on shell functions (with a little
       support from the zsh/datetime module) the mechanisms used  are  not  as
       robust as those provided by a dedicated calendar utility.  Consequently
       the user should not rely on the shell for vital alerts.

       There is no calendar_delete function.

       There is no localization support for dates and times, nor  any  support
       for the use of time zones.

       Relative  periods  of  months  and  years  do not take into account the
       variable number of days.

       The calendar_show function is currently hardwired to use  xmessage  for
       displaying  alerts  on  X  Window  System  displays.   This  should  be
       configurable and ideally integrate better with the desktop.

       calendar_lockfiles hangs the shell while waiting for a lock on a  file.
       If called from a scheduled task, it should instead reschedule the event
       that caused it.