=begin Copyright (C) 2008 Sam Roberts This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the ruby language itself, see the file COPYING for details. =end require 'vpim/dirinfo' require 'vpim/field' require 'vpim/rfc2425' require 'vpim/vpim' require 'vpim/property/base' require 'vpim/property/common' require 'vpim/property/priority' require 'vpim/property/location' require 'vpim/property/resources' require 'vpim/property/recurrence' module Vpim class Icalendar class Vtodo include Vpim::Icalendar::Property::Base include Vpim::Icalendar::Property::Common include Vpim::Icalendar::Property::Priority include Vpim::Icalendar::Property::Location include Vpim::Icalendar::Property::Resources include Vpim::Icalendar::Property::Recurrence def initialize(fields) #:nodoc: outer, inner = Vpim.outer_inner(fields) @properties = Vpim::DirectoryInfo.create(outer) @elements = inner end # TODO - derive everything from Icalendar::Component to get this kind of stuff? def fields #:nodoc: f = @properties.to_a last = f.pop f.push @elements f.push last end def properties #:nodoc: @properties end # Create a new Vtodo object. # # If specified, +fields+ must be either an array of Field objects to # add, or a Hash of String names to values that will be used to build # Field objects. The latter is a convenient short-cut allowing the Field # objects to be created for you when called like: # # Vtodo.create('SUMMARY' => "buy mangos") # # TODO - maybe todos are usually created in a particular way? I can # make it easier. Ideally, I would like to make it hard to encode an invalid # Event. def Vtodo.create(fields=[]) di = DirectoryInfo.create([], 'VTODO') Vpim::DirectoryInfo::Field.create_array(fields).each { |f| di.push_unique f } new(di.to_a) end # The date and time that a to-do is expected to be completed, a Time. def due proptime 'DUE' end # The date and time that a to-do was actually completed, a Time. def completed proptime 'COMPLETED' end # The percentage completetion of the to-do, between 0 and 100. 0 means it hasn't # started, 100 that it has been completed. # # TODO - the handling of this property isn't tied to either COMPLETED: or # STATUS:, but perhaps it should be? def percent_complete propinteger 'PERCENT-COMPLETE' end end end end