IPS News Posted February 19, 2014 Share Posted February 19, 2014 IP.Calendar has supported basic recurring calendar events for many versions now. You can create events that recur weekly, monthly or yearly in IP.Calendar, and they will automatically show up on their specified schedule. While this capability is certainly useful, we felt it was time to enhance event recurrence capabilities in the next version of IP.Calendar. New options Recurring every week, month or year is useful, but there are many other ways events can recur and IP.Calendar has no provisions to accommodate those recurrence types in the 3.x IP.Calendar release. For 4.0 we have added several new recurrence-based options to the calendar. Recur daily, weekly, monthly or yearly In addition to the three options available in previous versions, you can now configure events to recur daily. Recurrence frequency You are no longer restricted to recurring every week (or month or other time period). You can now configure events to recur every 2 weeks, or every 3 months, or every 10 days, or whatever period of time you need to. Weekly recurrence: days of the week If your event recurs weekly, you can now specify the days of the week the event should recur on. This means you can configure an event that recurs weekly on every Tuesday and Thursday, for instance. Recurrence timeframe In previous versions of IP.Calendar, the end date specified when the event should stop recurring. In 4.0, the end date/time specifies when the original recurrence end date/time are. This means you can have an event that lasts 2 days and recurs annually, for instance (in other words, recurring ranged events). When configuring the event, you now have three options for specifying the recurrence information: Never end End after a certain number of occurrences End on a certain date You can now configure events like Christmas which never end, you can configure meetings which have a certain number of occurrences before they are finished, and you can configure recurring events that end on a certain date. As you can see, the options have been greatly expanded to accommodate many more types of recurring events. Some technical details At a technical level, event recurrence data is stored as an "RRULE", just like the iCalendar specification will specify. In fact, the data should be a 1:1 equivalent. If you import iCalendar events which have recurrence capabilities not supported by calendar, those events will be skipped during the import routine (as they are presently), however there are now far fewer recurrence capabilities that are wholly unsupported. By storing the exact RRULE value we have a few benefits over previous versions of Calendar: Event importing is simpler, as we can copy the rule directly into the database unmodified (after verifying we support all parameters) Event exporting is simpler for the same reason We can expand recurring event support in the future if necessary with few database changes necessary Using PHP you can easily find future event recurrence details using the nextOccurrence() method. /** * Find the next occurrence of an event starting from a specified start point * * @param IPScalendarDate $date Date to start from * @param string $type Type of date to check against (startDate or endDate) * @return IPScalendarDate|NULL */ public function nextOccurrence( $date, $type='startDate' )This instance method is run against a calendar event, passing in a date to find the next occurrence from. You can look for either start date or end date. Attached Thumbnails View the full article View the full article Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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