kopia lustrzana https://github.com/collective/icalendar
325 wiersze
9.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
325 wiersze
9.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
iCalendar package
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=================
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This package is used for parsing and generating iCalendar files following the
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standard in RFC 2445.
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It should be fully compliant, but it is possible to generate and parse invalid
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files if you really want to.
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File structure
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--------------
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An iCalendar file is a text file (utf-8) with a special format. Basically it
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consists of content lines.
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Each content line defines a property that has 3 parts (name, parameters,
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values). Parameters are optional.
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A simple content line with only name and value could look like this::
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BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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A content line with parameters can look like this::
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ATTENDEE;CN=Max Rasmussen;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT:MAILTO:example@example.com
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And the parts are::
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Name: ATTENDEE
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Params: CN=Max Rasmussen;ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT
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Value: MAILTO:example@example.com
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Long content lines are usually "folded" to less than 75 character, but the
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package takes care of that.
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Overview
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--------
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On a higher level iCalendar files consists of components. Components can have
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sub components.
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The root component is the VCALENDAR::
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BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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... vcalendar properties ...
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END:VCALENDAR
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The most frequent subcomponent to a VCALENDAR is a VEVENT. They are
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nested like this::
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BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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... vcalendar properties ...
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BEGIN:VEVENT
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... vevent properties ...
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END:VEVENT
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END:VCALENDAR
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Inside the components there are properties with values. The values
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have special types. like integer, text, datetime etc. These values are
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encoded in a special text format in an iCalendar file.
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There are methods for converting to and from these encodings in the package.
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These are the most important imports::
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>>> from icalendar import Calendar, Event
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Components
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----------
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Components are like (Case Insensitive) dicts. So if you want to set a property
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you do it like this. The calendar is a component::
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>>> cal = Calendar()
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>>> cal['dtstart'] = '20050404T080000'
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>>> cal['summary'] = 'Python meeting about calendaring'
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>>> for k,v in cal.items():
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... k,v
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(u'DTSTART', '20050404T080000')
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(u'SUMMARY', 'Python meeting about calendaring')
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NOTE: the recommended way to add components to the calendar is to use
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create the subcomponent and add it via Calendar.add! The example above adds a
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string, but not a vText component.
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You can generate a string for a file with the to_ical() method::
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>>> cal.to_ical()
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'BEGIN:VCALENDAR\r\nDTSTART:20050404T080000\r\nSUMMARY:Python meeting about calendaring\r\nEND:VCALENDAR\r\n'
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The rendered view is easier to read::
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BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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DTSTART:20050404T080000
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SUMMARY:Python meeting about calendaring
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END:VCALENDAR
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So, let's define a function so we can easily display to_ical() output::
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>>> def display(cal):
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... return cal.to_ical().replace('\r\n', '\n').strip()
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You can set multiple properties like this::
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>>> cal = Calendar()
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>>> cal['attendee'] = ['MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk','MAILTO:test@example.com']
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>>> print display(cal)
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BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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ATTENDEE:MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk
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ATTENDEE:MAILTO:test@example.com
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END:VCALENDAR
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If you don't want to care about whether a property value is a list or
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a single value, just use the add() method. It will automatically
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convert the property to a list of values if more than one value is
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added. Here is an example::
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>>> cal = Calendar()
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>>> cal.add('attendee', 'MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk')
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>>> cal.add('attendee', 'MAILTO:test@example.com')
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>>> print display(cal)
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BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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ATTENDEE:MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk
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ATTENDEE:MAILTO:test@example.com
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END:VCALENDAR
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Note: this version doesn't check for compliance, so you should look in
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the RFC 2445 spec for legal properties for each component, or look in
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the icalendar/calendar.py file, where it is at least defined for each
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component.
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Subcomponents
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-------------
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Any component can have subcomponents. Eg. inside a calendar there can
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be events. They can be arbitrarily nested. First by making a new
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component::
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>>> event = Event()
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>>> event['uid'] = '42'
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>>> event['dtstart'] = '20050404T080000'
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And then appending it to a "parent"::
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>>> cal.add_component(event)
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>>> print display(cal)
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BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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ATTENDEE:MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk
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ATTENDEE:MAILTO:test@example.com
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BEGIN:VEVENT
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DTSTART:20050404T080000
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UID:42
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END:VEVENT
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END:VCALENDAR
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Subcomponents are appended to the subcomponents property on the component::
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>>> cal.subcomponents
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[VEVENT({'DTSTART': '20050404T080000', 'UID': '42'})]
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Value types
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-----------
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Property values are utf-8 encoded strings.
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This is impractical if you want to use the data for further
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computation. Eg. the datetime format looks like this:
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'20050404T080000'. But the package makes it simple to Parse and
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generate iCalendar formatted strings.
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Basically you can make the add() method do the thinking, or you can do it
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yourself.
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To add a datetime value, you can use Pythons built in datetime types,
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and the set the encode parameter to true, and it will convert to the
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type defined in the spec::
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>>> from datetime import datetime
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>>> cal.add('dtstart', datetime(2005,4,4,8,0,0))
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>>> cal['dtstart'].to_ical()
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'20050404T080000'
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If that doesn't work satisfactorily for some reason, you can also do it
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manually.
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In 'icalendar.prop', all the iCalendar data types are defined. Each
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type has a class that can parse and encode the type.
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So if you want to do it manually::
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>>> from icalendar import vDatetime
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>>> now = datetime(2005,4,4,8,0,0)
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>>> vDatetime(now).to_ical()
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'20050404T080000'
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So the drill is to initialise the object with a python built in type,
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and then call the "to_ical()" method on the object. That will return an
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ical encoded string.
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You can do it the other way around too. To parse an encoded string, just call
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the "from_ical()" method, and it will return an instance of the corresponding
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Python type::
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>>> vDatetime.from_ical('20050404T080000')
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datetime.datetime(2005, 4, 4, 8, 0)
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>>> dt = vDatetime.from_ical('20050404T080000Z')
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>>> repr(dt)[:62]
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'datetime.datetime(2005, 4, 4, 8, 0, tzinfo=<UTC>)'
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You can also choose to use the decoded() method, which will return a decoded
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value directly::
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>>> cal = Calendar()
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>>> cal.add('dtstart', datetime(2005,4,4,8,0,0))
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>>> cal['dtstart'].to_ical()
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'20050404T080000'
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>>> cal.decoded('dtstart')
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datetime.datetime(2005, 4, 4, 8, 0)
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Property parameters
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-------------------
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Property parameters are automatically added, depending on the input value. For
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example, for date/time related properties, the value type and timezone
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identifier (if applicable) are automatically added here::
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>>> event = Event()
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>>> event.add('dtstart', datetime(2010, 10, 10, 10, 0, 0,
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... tzinfo=pytz.timezone("Europe/Vienna")))
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>>> lines = event.to_ical().splitlines()
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>>> self.assertTrue(
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... b"DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Vienna;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101010T100000"
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... in lines)
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You can also add arbitrary property parameters by passing a parameters
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dictionary to the add method like so::
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>>> event = Event()
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>>> event.add('X-TEST-PROP', 'tryout.',
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.... parameters={'prop1': 'val1', 'prop2': 'val2'})
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>>> lines = event.to_ical().splitlines()
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>>> self.assertTrue(b"X-TEST-PROP;PROP1=val1;PROP2=val2:tryout." in lines)
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Example
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-------
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Here is an example generating a complete iCal calendar file with a
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single event that can be loaded into the Mozilla calendar
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Init the calendar::
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>>> cal = Calendar()
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>>> from datetime import datetime
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Some properties are required to be compliant::
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>>> cal.add('prodid', '-//My calendar product//mxm.dk//')
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>>> cal.add('version', '2.0')
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We need at least one subcomponent for a calendar to be compliant::
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>>> import pytz
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>>> event = Event()
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>>> event.add('summary', 'Python meeting about calendaring')
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>>> event.add('dtstart', datetime(2005,4,4,8,0,0,tzinfo=pytz.utc))
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>>> event.add('dtend', datetime(2005,4,4,10,0,0,tzinfo=pytz.utc))
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>>> event.add('dtstamp', datetime(2005,4,4,0,10,0,tzinfo=pytz.utc))
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A property with parameters. Notice that they are an attribute on the value::
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>>> from icalendar import vCalAddress, vText
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>>> organizer = vCalAddress('MAILTO:noone@example.com')
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Automatic encoding is not yet implemented for parameter values, so you
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must use the 'v*' types you can import from the icalendar package
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(they're defined in ``icalendar.prop``)::
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>>> organizer.params['cn'] = vText('Max Rasmussen')
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>>> organizer.params['role'] = vText('CHAIR')
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>>> event['organizer'] = organizer
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>>> event['location'] = vText('Odense, Denmark')
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>>> event['uid'] = '20050115T101010/27346262376@mxm.dk'
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>>> event.add('priority', 5)
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>>> attendee = vCalAddress('MAILTO:maxm@example.com')
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>>> attendee.params['cn'] = vText('Max Rasmussen')
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>>> attendee.params['ROLE'] = vText('REQ-PARTICIPANT')
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>>> event.add('attendee', attendee, encode=0)
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>>> attendee = vCalAddress('MAILTO:the-dude@example.com')
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>>> attendee.params['cn'] = vText('The Dude')
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>>> attendee.params['ROLE'] = vText('REQ-PARTICIPANT')
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>>> event.add('attendee', attendee, encode=0)
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Add the event to the calendar::
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>>> cal.add_component(event)
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Write to disk::
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>>> import tempfile, os
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>>> directory = tempfile.mkdtemp()
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>>> f = open(os.path.join(directory, 'example.ics'), 'wb')
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>>> f.write(cal.to_ical())
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>>> f.close()
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More documentation
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==================
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Have a look at the tests of this package to get more examples.
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All modules and classes docstrings, which document how they work.
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