How to Install and Uninstall perl-Date-Simple Package on openSuSE Tumbleweed

Last updated: December 30,2024

1. Install "perl-Date-Simple" package

Please follow the instructions below to install perl-Date-Simple on openSuSE Tumbleweed

$ sudo zypper refresh $ sudo zypper install perl-Date-Simple

2. Uninstall "perl-Date-Simple" package

Learn how to uninstall perl-Date-Simple on openSuSE Tumbleweed:

$ sudo zypper remove perl-Date-Simple

3. Information about the perl-Date-Simple package on openSuSE Tumbleweed

Information for package perl-Date-Simple:
-----------------------------------------
Repository : openSUSE-Tumbleweed-Oss
Name : perl-Date-Simple
Version : 3.03-9.43
Arch : x86_64
Vendor : openSUSE
Installed Size : 91.0 KiB
Installed : No
Status : not installed
Source package : perl-Date-Simple-3.03-9.43.src
Upstream URL : http://search.cpan.org/dist/Date-Simple/
Summary : a simple date object
Description :
Dates are complex enough without times and timezones. This module may be
used to create simple date objects. It handles:
* Validation.
Reject 1999-02-29 but accept 2000-02-29.
* Interval arithmetic.
How many days were between two given dates? What date comes N days after
today?
* Day-of-week calculation.
What day of the week is a given date?
* Transparent date formatting.
How should a date object be formatted.
It does *not* deal with hours, minutes, seconds, and time zones.
A date is uniquely identified by year, month, and day integers within valid
ranges. This module will not allow the creation of objects for invalid
dates. Attempting to create an invalid date will return undef. Month
numbering starts at 1 for January, unlike in C and Java. Years are 4-digit.
Gregorian dates up to year 9999 are handled correctly, but we rely on
Perl's builtin 'localtime' function when the current date is requested. On
some platforms, 'localtime' may be vulnerable to rollovers such as the Unix
'time_t' wraparound of 18 January 2038.
Overloading is used so you can compare or subtract two dates using standard
numeric operators such as '==', and the sum of a date object and an integer
is another date object.
Date::Simple objects are immutable. After assigning '$date1' to '$date2',
no change to '$date1' can affect '$date2'. This means, for example, that
there is nothing like a 'set_year' operation, and '$date++' assigns a new
object to '$date'.
This module contains various undocumented functions. They may not be
available on all platforms and are likely to change or disappear in future
releases. Please let the author know if you think any of them should be
public.