birthdays¶ ↑
Description¶ ↑
Show the birthdays in a time period so you don't forget them!
Features¶ ↑
Use a wrapper around Chronic so that the time specification is quite powerful.
Examples¶ ↑
By default use the file ~/.birthdays.yaml, that you can fill like:
"Father's Day": "3rd Sunday in June" "Christmas": "25 December" "New Year": "01 January" "John Doe": 1970-01-01
Then to see the birthdays for next week just use
$ birthdays 'now..in 7 days'
By default it uses the current day. We can also specify several ranges:
$ birthdays '2020-01-01' On 2020-01-01 12:00:00 +0100, the birthdays are - New Year (born 2021-01-01, -1y) - John Doe (born 1970-01-01, 50y) $ birthdays '2020-01-01..2020-02-01' '2020-06-01..2020-08' On (2020-01-01 12:00:00 +0100..2020-02-01 12:00:00 +0100), the birthdays are - New Year (born 2021-01-01, -1y) - John Doe (born 1970-01-01, 50y) On (2020-06-01 12:00:00 +0200..2020-08-16 12:00:00 +0200), the birthdays are - Father's Day (born 2021-06-20, -1y)
Or query for the age instead:
$ birthdays --age 2020-01-01 2030-01 On 2020-01-01 12:00:00 +0100, the ages are - Father's Day (born 2021-06-20, -2y) [-46177200 secs] - Christmas (born 2020-12-25, -1y) [-30888000 secs] - New Year (born 2021-01-01, -1y) [-31492800 secs] - John Doe (born 1970-01-01, 50y) [50 yrs 1 day] On 2030-01-16 12:00:00 +0100, the ages are - Father's Day (born 2021-06-20, 9y) [104 mos 12 days 13 hrs] - Christmas (born 2020-12-25, 10y) [110 mos 9 days 12 hrs] - New Year (born 2021-01-01, 9y) [110 mos 2 days 12 hrs] - John Doe (born 1970-01-01, 60y) [731 mos 12 hrs]
Install¶ ↑
~~~ sh $ gem install birthdays ~~~
Copyright¶ ↑
Copyright © 2015–2020 Damien Robert
MIT License. See {LICENSE.txt
} for details.