/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
// Name:        datetime.h
// Purpose:     interface of wxDateTime
// Author:      wxWidgets team
// Licence:     wxWindows licence
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
/**
    @class wxDateTime
    wxDateTime class represents an absolute moment in time.
    The type @c wxDateTime_t is typedefed as unsigned short and is
    used to contain the number of years, hours, minutes, seconds and
    milliseconds.
    Global constant ::wxDefaultDateTime and synonym for it ::wxInvalidDateTime are
    defined. This constant will be different from any valid wxDateTime object.
    @section datetime_static Static Functions
    All static functions either set or return the static variables of
    wxDateSpan (the country), return the current moment, year, month or number
    of days in it, or do some general calendar-related actions.
    Please note that although several function accept an extra Calendar
    parameter, it is currently ignored as only the Gregorian calendar is
    supported. Future versions will support other calendars.
    @section datetime_formatting Date Formatting and Parsing
    The date formatting and parsing functions convert wxDateTime objects to and
    from text. The conversions to text are mostly trivial: you can either do it
    using the default date and time representations for the current locale
    (FormatDate() and FormatTime()), using the international standard
    representation defined by ISO 8601 (FormatISODate(), FormatISOTime() and
    FormatISOCombined()) or by specifying any format at all and using Format()
    directly.
    The conversions from text are more interesting, as there are much more
    possibilities to care about. The simplest cases can be taken care of with
    ParseFormat() which can parse any date in the given (rigid) format.
    ParseRfc822Date() is another function for parsing dates in predefined
    format -- the one of RFC 822 which (still...) defines the format of email
    messages on the Internet. This format cannot be described with
    @c strptime(3)-like format strings used by Format(), hence the need for a
    separate function.
    But the most interesting functions are ParseTime(), ParseDate() and
    ParseDateTime(). They try to parse the date and time (or only one of them)
    in 'free' format, i.e. allow them to be specified in any of possible ways.
    These functions will usually be used to parse the (interactive) user input
    which is not bound to be in any predefined format. As an example,
    ParseDate() can parse the strings such as "tomorrow", "March first" and
    even "next Sunday".
    Finally notice that each of the parsing functions is available in several
    overloads: if the input string is a narrow (@c char *) string, then a
    narrow pointer is returned. If the input string is a wide string, a wide
    char pointer is returned. Finally, if the input parameter is a wxString, a
    narrow char pointer is also returned for backwards compatibility but there
    is also an additional argument of wxString::const_iterator type in which,
    if it is not @NULL, an iterator pointing to the end of the scanned string
    part is returned.
    @library{wxbase}
    @category{data}
    @stdobjects
    - ::wxDefaultDateTime
    @see @ref overview_datetime, wxTimeSpan, wxDateSpan, wxCalendarCtrl
*/
class wxDateTime
{
public:
    /**
        A small unsigned integer type for storing things like minutes,
        seconds &c. It should be at least short (i.e. not char) to contain
        the number of milliseconds - it may also be 'int' because there is
        no size penalty associated with it in our code, we don't store any
        data in this format.
    */
    typedef unsigned short wxDateTime_t;
    /**
        Time zone symbolic names.
    */
    enum TZ
    {
        /// the time in the current time zone
        Local,
        //@{
        /// zones from GMT (= Greenwich Mean Time): they're guaranteed to be
        /// consequent numbers, so writing something like `GMT0 + offset' is
        /// safe if abs(offset) <= 12
        // underscore stands for minus
        GMT_12, GMT_11, GMT_10, GMT_9, GMT_8, GMT_7,
        GMT_6, GMT_5, GMT_4, GMT_3, GMT_2, GMT_1,
        GMT0,
        GMT1, GMT2, GMT3, GMT4, GMT5, GMT6,
        GMT7, GMT8, GMT9, GMT10, GMT11, GMT12, GMT13,
        // Note that GMT12 and GMT_12 are not the same: there is a difference
        // of exactly one day between them
        //@}
        // some symbolic names for TZ
        // Europe
        WET = GMT0,         //!< Western Europe Time
        WEST = GMT1,        //!< Western Europe Summer Time
        CET = GMT1,         //!< Central Europe Time
        CEST = GMT2,        //!< Central Europe Summer Time
        EET = GMT2,         //!< Eastern Europe Time
        EEST = GMT3,        //!< Eastern Europe Summer Time
        MSK = GMT3,         //!< Moscow Time
        MSD = GMT4,         //!< Moscow Summer Time
        // US and Canada
        AST = GMT_4,        //!< Atlantic Standard Time
        ADT = GMT_3,        //!< Atlantic Daylight Time
        EST = GMT_5,        //!< Eastern Standard Time
        EDT = GMT_4,        //!< Eastern Daylight Saving Time
        CST = GMT_6,        //!< Central Standard Time
        CDT = GMT_5,        //!< Central Daylight Saving Time
        MST = GMT_7,        //!< Mountain Standard Time
        MDT = GMT_6,        //!< Mountain Daylight Saving Time
        PST = GMT_8,        //!< Pacific Standard Time
        PDT = GMT_7,        //!< Pacific Daylight Saving Time
        HST = GMT_10,       //!< Hawaiian Standard Time
        AKST = GMT_9,       //!< Alaska Standard Time
        AKDT = GMT_8,       //!< Alaska Daylight Saving Time
        // Australia
        A_WST = GMT8,       //!< Western Standard Time
        A_CST = GMT13 + 1,  //!< Central Standard Time (+9.5)
        A_EST = GMT10,      //!< Eastern Standard Time
        A_ESST = GMT11,     //!< Eastern Summer Time
        // New Zealand
        NZST = GMT12,       //!< Standard Time
        NZDT = GMT13,       //!< Daylight Saving Time
        /// Universal Coordinated Time = the new and politically correct name
        /// for GMT.
        UTC = GMT0
    };
    /**
        Several functions accept an extra parameter specifying the calendar to use
        (although most of them only support now the Gregorian calendar). This
        parameters is one of the following values.
    */
    enum Calendar
    {
        Gregorian,  ///< calendar currently in use in Western countries
        Julian      ///< calendar in use since -45 until the 1582 (or later)
    };
    /**
        Date calculations often depend on the country and wxDateTime allows to set
        the country whose conventions should be used using SetCountry(). It takes
        one of the following values as parameter.
    */
    enum Country
    {
        Country_Unknown, ///< no special information for this country
        Country_Default, ///< set the default country with SetCountry() method
                         ///< or use the default country with any other
        Country_WesternEurope_Start,
        Country_EEC = Country_WesternEurope_Start,
        France,
        Germany,
        UK,
        Country_WesternEurope_End = UK,
        Russia,
        USA
    };
    /// symbolic names for the months
    enum Month
    {
        Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec,
        /// Invalid month value.
        Inv_Month
    };
    /// symbolic names for the weekdays
    enum WeekDay
    {
        Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat,
        /// Invalid week day value.
        Inv_WeekDay
    };
    /// invalid value for the year
    enum Year
    {
        Inv_Year = SHRT_MIN    // should hold in wxDateTime_t
    };
    /**
        Flags to be used with GetMonthName() and GetWeekDayName() functions.
    */
    enum NameFlags
    {
        Name_Full = 0x01,       ///< return full name
        Name_Abbr = 0x02        ///< return abbreviated name
    };
    /**
        Different parts of the world use different conventions for the week start.
        In some countries, the week starts on Sunday, while in others -- on Monday.
        The ISO standard doesn't address this issue, so we support both conventions
        in the functions whose result depends on it (GetWeekOfYear() and
        GetWeekOfMonth()).
        The desired behaviour may be specified by giving one of the following
        constants as argument to these functions.
    */
    enum WeekFlags
    {
        Default_First,   ///< Sunday_First for US, Monday_First for the rest
        Monday_First,    ///< week starts with a Monday
        Sunday_First     ///< week starts with a Sunday
    };
    /**
        Class representing a time zone.
        The representation is simply the offset, in seconds, from UTC.
     */
    class WXDLLIMPEXP_BASE TimeZone
    {
    public:
        /// Constructor for a named time zone.
        TimeZone(TZ tz);
        /// Constructor for the given offset in seconds.
        TimeZone(long offset = 0);
        /// Create a time zone with the given offset in seconds.
        static TimeZone Make(long offset);
        /**
            Return true if this is the local time zone.
            This method can be useful for distinguishing between UTC time zone
            and local time zone in Great Britain, which use the same offset as
            UTC (i.e. 0), but do use DST.
            @since 3.1.1
         */
        bool IsLocal() const;
        /// Return the offset of this time zone from UTC, in seconds.
        long GetOffset() const;
    };
    /**
        Contains broken down date-time representation.
        This struct is analogous to standard C struct tm and uses
        the same, not always immediately obvious, conventions for its members:
        notably its mon and mday fields count from 0 while yday counts from 1.
     */
    struct Tm
    {
        wxDateTime_t msec,  ///< Number of milliseconds.
                     sec,   ///< Seconds in 0..59 (60 with leap seconds) range.
                     min,   ///< Minutes in 0..59 range.
                     hour,  ///< Hours since midnight in 0..23 range.
                     mday,  ///< Day of the month in 1..31 range.
                     yday;  ///< Day of the year in 0..365 range.
        Month mon;          ///< Month, as an enumerated constant.
        int year;           ///< Year.
        /**
            Check if the given date/time is valid (in Gregorian calendar).
            Return @false if the components don't correspond to a correct date.
         */
        bool IsValid() const;
        /**
            Return the week day corresponding to this date.
            Unlike the other fields, the week day is not always available and
            so must be accessed using this method as it is computed on demand
            when it is called.
         */
        WeekDay GetWeekDay();
    };
    /**
        @name Constructors, Assignment Operators and Setters
        Constructors and various Set() methods are collected here. If you
        construct a date object from separate values for day, month and year,
        you should use IsValid() method to check that the values were correct
        as constructors cannot return an error code.
    */
    //@{
    /**
        Default constructor. Use one of the Set() functions to initialize the
        object later.
    */
    wxDateTime();
    /**
       Copy constructor.
    */
    wxDateTime(const wxDateTime& date);
    
    /**
        Same as Set().
    */
    wxDateTime(time_t timet);
    /**
        Same as Set().
    */
    wxDateTime(const struct tm& tm);
    /**
        Same as Set().
    */
    wxDateTime(double jdn);
    /**
        Same as Set().
    */
    wxDateTime(wxDateTime_t hour, wxDateTime_t minute = 0,
               wxDateTime_t second = 0, wxDateTime_t millisec = 0);
    /**
        Same as Set().
    */
    wxDateTime(wxDateTime_t day, Month month,
               int year = Inv_Year, wxDateTime_t hour = 0,
               wxDateTime_t minute = 0, wxDateTime_t second = 0,
               wxDateTime_t millisec = 0);
    /**
        Same as SetFromMSWSysTime.
        @param st
            Input, Windows SYSTEMTIME reference
        @since 2.9.0
        @remarks MSW only
        @onlyfor{wxmsw}
    */
    wxDateTime(const struct _SYSTEMTIME& st);
    /**
        Reset time to midnight (00:00:00) without changing the date.
    */
    wxDateTime& ResetTime();
    /**
        Constructs the object from @a timet value holding the number of seconds
        since Jan 1, 1970 UTC.
        If @a timet is invalid, i.e. @code (time_t)-1 @endcode, wxDateTime
        becomes invalid too, i.e. its IsValid() will return @false.
    */
    wxDateTime& Set(time_t timet);
    /**
        Sets the date and time from the broken down representation in the
        standard @a tm structure.
    */
    wxDateTime& Set(const struct tm& tm);
    /**
       Sets the date and time from the broken down representation in the
       @a wxDateTime::Tm structure.
    */
    wxDateTime& Set(const Tm& tm);
    
    /**
        Sets the date from the so-called Julian Day Number.
        By definition, the Julian Day Number, usually abbreviated as JDN, of a
        particular instant is the fractional number of days since 12 hours
        Universal Coordinated Time (Greenwich mean noon) on January 1 of the
        year -4712 in the Julian proleptic calendar.
    */
    wxDateTime& Set(double jdn);
    /**
        Sets the date to be equal to Today() and the time from supplied
        parameters.
        See the full Set() overload for the remarks about DST.
    */
    wxDateTime& Set(wxDateTime_t hour, wxDateTime_t minute = 0,
                    wxDateTime_t second = 0, wxDateTime_t millisec = 0);
    /**
        Sets the date and time from the parameters.
        If the function parameters are invalid, e.g. @a month is February and
        @a day is 30, the object is left in an invalid state, i.e. IsValid()
        method will return @false.
        If the specified time moment is invalid due to DST, i.e. it falls into
        the "missing" hour on the date on which the DST starts, a valid
        wxDateTime object is still constructed but its hour component is moved
        forward to ensure that it corresponds to a valid moment in the local
        time zone. For example, in the CET time zone the DST started on
        2013-03-31T02:00:00 in 2013 and so setting the object to 2:30 at this
        date actually sets the hour to 3, and not 2.
    */
    wxDateTime& Set(wxDateTime_t day, Month month,
                    int year = Inv_Year, wxDateTime_t hour = 0,
                    wxDateTime_t minute = 0, wxDateTime_t second = 0,
                    wxDateTime_t millisec = 0);
    /**
        Sets the day without changing other date components.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetDay(unsigned short day);
    /**
        Sets the date from the date and time in DOS format.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetFromDOS(unsigned long ddt);
    /**
        Sets the hour without changing other date components.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetHour(unsigned short hour);
    /**
        Sets the millisecond without changing other date components.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetMillisecond(unsigned short millisecond);
    /**
        Sets the minute without changing other date components.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetMinute(unsigned short minute);
    /**
        Sets the month without changing other date components.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetMonth(Month month);
    /**
        Sets the second without changing other date components.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetSecond(unsigned short second);
    /**
        Sets the date and time of to the current values. Same as assigning the
        result of Now() to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetToCurrent();
    /**
        Sets the year without changing other date components.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetYear(int year);
    /**
        Same as Set().
    */
    wxDateTime& operator=(time_t timet);
    /**
        Same as Set().
    */
    wxDateTime& operator=(const struct tm& tm);
    //@}
    /**
        @name Accessors
        Here are the trivial accessors. Other functions, which might have to
        perform some more complicated calculations to find the answer are under
        the "Date Arithmetics" section.
    */
    //@{
    /**
        Returns the date and time in DOS format.
    */
    unsigned long GetAsDOS() const;
    /**
        Initialize using the Windows SYSTEMTIME structure.
        @param st
            Input, Windows SYSTEMTIME reference
        @since 2.9.0
        @remarks MSW only
        @onlyfor{wxmsw}
    */
    wxDateTime& SetFromMSWSysTime(const struct _SYSTEMTIME& st);
    /**
        Returns the date and time in the Windows SYSTEMTIME format.
        @param st
            Output, pointer to Windows SYSTEMTIME
        @since 2.9.0
        @remarks MSW only
        @onlyfor{wxmsw}
    */
    void GetAsMSWSysTime(struct _SYSTEMTIME* st) const;
    /**
        Returns the century of this date.
    */
    int GetCentury(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the object having the same date component as this one but time
        of 00:00:00.
        @since 2.8.2
        @see ResetTime()
    */
    wxDateTime GetDateOnly() const;
    /**
        Returns the day in the given timezone (local one by default).
    */
    unsigned short GetDay(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the day of the year (in 1-366 range) in the given timezone
        (local one by default).
    */
    unsigned short GetDayOfYear(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the hour in the given timezone (local one by default).
    */
    unsigned short GetHour(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the milliseconds in the given timezone (local one by default).
    */
    unsigned short GetMillisecond(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the minute in the given timezone (local one by default).
    */
    unsigned short GetMinute(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the month in the given timezone (local one by default).
    */
    Month GetMonth(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the seconds in the given timezone (local one by default).
    */
    unsigned short GetSecond(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the number of seconds since Jan 1, 1970 UTC.
        This function is provided solely for interoperability with the standard
        C library and other libraries using @c time_t values. If you just need
        to get the value represented by this object as a number, use GetValue()
        instead, which doesn't lose precision and covers the entire supported
        range of dates, unlike this one which is limited to the range of
        positive 32 bit values, i.e. from Jan 1, 1970 to around Jan 19, 2038
        and returns @c -1 for the dates outside of it.
        Additionally, this method must be called on an initialized date object
        and an assertion failure occurs if it is called on an object for which
        IsValid() is false.
    */
    time_t GetTicks() const;
    /**
        Returns the number of milliseconds since Jan 1, 1970 UTC.
        Directly returns the internal representation of wxDateTime object as
        the number of milliseconds (positive or negative) since the Unix/C
        epoch.
     */
    wxLongLong GetValue() const;
    /**
        Returns broken down representation of the date and time.
    */
    Tm GetTm(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the week day in the given timezone (local one by default).
    */
    WeekDay GetWeekDay(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the year to which the week containing this date belongs.
        The value returned by this function is the same as the year, except,
        possibly, for a few days at the very beginning and very end of the year
        if they belong to a week which is mostly (i.e. at least 4 days) is in
        another year in which case that other (previous or next) year is
        returned.
        For example, January 1 in 2015 belongs to the first year of 2015, hence
        GetWeekOfYear() for it returns 1 and this function returns 2015.
        However January 1 in 2016 belongs to the last week of 2015 according to
        ISO 8601 standard rules and so GetWeekOfYear() returns 53 and this
        function returns 2015, although GetYear() returns 2016.
        @since 3.1.0
    */
    int GetWeekBasedYear(const TimeZone& tz) const;
    /**
        Returns the ordinal number of the week in the month (in 1-5 range).
        As GetWeekOfYear(), this function supports both conventions for the
        week start.
    */
    wxDateTime_t GetWeekOfMonth(WeekFlags flags = Monday_First,
                                const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the number of the week of the year this date is in. The first
        week of the year is, according to international standards, the one
        containing Jan 4 or, equivalently, the first week which has Thursday in
        this year. Both of these definitions are the same as saying that the
        first week of the year must contain more than half of its days in this
        year. Accordingly, the week number will always be in 1-53 range (52 for
        non-leap years).
        The function depends on the week start convention specified by the @a flags
        argument but its results for @c Sunday_First are not well-defined as the
        ISO definition quoted above applies to the weeks starting on Monday only.
        @see GetWeekBasedYear()
    */
    wxDateTime_t GetWeekOfYear(WeekFlags flags = Monday_First,
                               const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns the year in the given timezone (local one by default).
    */
    int GetYear(const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the object represents a valid time moment.
    */
    bool IsValid() const;
    /**
        Returns @true is this day is not a holiday in the given country.
    */
    bool IsWorkDay(Country country = Country_Default) const;
    //@}
    /**
        @name Date Comparison
        There are several functions to allow date comparison. To supplement
        them, the usual comparison operators taking wxDateTime are defined as
        well.
        Notice that an invalid wxDateTime object can only be compared for
        exact equality, i.e. using @c operator==(), @c operator!=() or
        IsEqualTo(), but comparisons involving an invalid wxDateTime object
        using any other operators or IsEarlierThan() or IsLaterThan() functions
        would result in an assert because their result is not well-defined.
    */
    //@{
    /**
        Returns @true if this date precedes the given one.
    */
    bool IsEarlierThan(const wxDateTime& datetime) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the two dates are strictly identical.
    */
    bool IsEqualTo(const wxDateTime& datetime) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the date is equal to another one up to the given time
        interval, i.e.\ if the absolute difference between the two dates is less
        than this interval.
    */
    bool IsEqualUpTo(const wxDateTime& dt, const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if this date is later than the given one.
    */
    bool IsLaterThan(const wxDateTime& datetime) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the date is the same without comparing the time parts.
    */
    bool IsSameDate(const wxDateTime& dt) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the time is the same (although dates may differ).
    */
    bool IsSameTime(const wxDateTime& dt) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if this date lies strictly between the two given dates.
        @see IsBetween()
    */
    bool IsStrictlyBetween(const wxDateTime& t1,
                            const wxDateTime& t2) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if IsStrictlyBetween() is @true or if the date is equal
        to one of the limit values.
        @see IsStrictlyBetween()
    */
    bool IsBetween(const wxDateTime& t1, const wxDateTime& t2) const;
    //@}
    /**
        @name Date Arithmetics
        These functions carry out
        @ref overview_datetime_arithmetics "arithmetics" on the wxDateTime
        objects. As explained in the overview, either wxTimeSpan or wxDateSpan
        may be added to wxDateTime, hence all functions are overloaded to
        accept both arguments.
        Also, both Add() and Subtract() have both const and non-const version.
        The first one returns a new object which represents the sum/difference
        of the original one with the argument while the second form modifies
        the object to which it is applied. The operators "-=" and "+=" are
        defined to be equivalent to the second forms of these functions.
    */
    //@{
    /**
        Adds the given date span to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime Add(const wxDateSpan& diff) const;
    /**
        Adds the given date span to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& Add(const wxDateSpan& diff);
    /**
        Adds the given time span to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime Add(const wxTimeSpan& diff) const;
    /**
        Adds the given time span to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& Add(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
    /**
        Subtracts the given time span from this object.
    */
    wxDateTime Subtract(const wxTimeSpan& diff) const;
    /**
        Subtracts the given time span from this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& Subtract(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
    /**
        Subtracts the given date span from this object.
    */
    wxDateTime Subtract(const wxDateSpan& diff) const;
    /**
        Subtracts the given date span from this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& Subtract(const wxDateSpan& diff);
    /**
        Subtracts another date from this one and returns the difference between
        them as a wxTimeSpan.
    */
    wxTimeSpan Subtract(const wxDateTime& dt) const;
    /**
       Returns the difference between this object and @a dt as a wxDateSpan.
       This method allows to find the number of entire years, months, weeks and
       days between @a dt and this date.
       @since 2.9.5
    */
    wxDateSpan DiffAsDateSpan(const wxDateTime& dt) const;
    /**
        Adds the given date span to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& operator+=(const wxDateSpan& diff);
    /**
        Adds the given date span to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime operator+(const wxDateSpan& ds) const;
    /**
        Subtracts the given date span from this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& operator-=(const wxDateSpan& diff);
    /**
        Subtracts the given date span from this object.
    */
    wxDateTime operator-(const wxDateSpan& ds) const;
    /**
        Adds the given time span to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& operator+=(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
    /**
        Adds the given time span to this object.
    */
    wxDateTime operator+(const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
    /**
        Subtracts the given time span from this object.
    */
    wxDateTime& operator-=(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
    /**
        Subtracts the given time span from this object.
    */
    wxDateTime operator-(const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
    /**
        Subtracts another date from this one and returns the difference between
        them as a wxTimeSpan.
    */
    wxTimeSpan operator-(const wxDateTime& dt2) const;
    //@}
    /**
        @name Date Formatting and Parsing
        See @ref datetime_formatting
    */
    //@{
    /**
        This function does the same as the standard ANSI C @c strftime(3)
        function (http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/clibrary/ctime/strftime.html).
        Please see its description for the meaning of @a format parameter.
        Notice that POSIX @c "%g", @c "%G", @c "%V" and @c "%z" format
        specifiers are supported even if the standard library doesn't support
        them (e.g. MSVC).
        It also accepts a few wxWidgets-specific extensions: you can optionally
        specify the width of the field to follow using @c printf(3)-like syntax
        and the format specification @c "%l" can be used to get the number of
        milliseconds.
        @see ParseFormat()
    */
    wxString Format(const wxString& format = wxDefaultDateTimeFormat,
                    const TimeZone& tz = Local) const;
    /**
        Identical to calling Format() with @c "%x" argument (which means
        "preferred date representation for the current locale").
    */
    wxString FormatDate() const;
    /**
        Returns the combined date-time representation in the ISO 8601 format
        @c "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS". The @a sep parameter default value produces
        the result exactly corresponding to the ISO standard, but it can also
        be useful to use a space as separator if a more human-readable combined
        date-time representation is needed.
        @see FormatISODate(), FormatISOTime(), ParseISOCombined()
    */
    wxString FormatISOCombined(char sep = 'T') const;
    /**
        This function returns the date representation in the ISO 8601 format
        @c "YYYY-MM-DD".
    */
    wxString FormatISODate() const;
    /**
        This function returns the time representation in the ISO 8601 format
        @c "HH:MM:SS".
    */
    wxString FormatISOTime() const;
    /**
        Identical to calling Format() with @c "%X" argument (which means
        "preferred time representation for the current locale").
    */
    wxString FormatTime() const;
    /**
        This function is like ParseDateTime(), but it only allows the date to
        be specified.
        It is thus less flexible then ParseDateTime(), but also has less
        chances to misinterpret the user input.
        See ParseFormat() for the description of function parameters and return
        value.
        @see Format()
    */
    bool ParseDate(const wxString& date, wxString::const_iterator *end);
    /**
        Parses the string @a datetime containing the date and time in free
        format.
        This function tries as hard as it can to interpret the given string as
        date and time. Unlike ParseRfc822Date(), it will accept anything that
        may be accepted and will only reject strings which cannot be parsed in
        any way at all. Notice that the function will fail if either date or
        time part is present but not both, use ParseDate() or ParseTime() to
        parse strings containing just the date or time component.
        See ParseFormat() for the description of function parameters and return
        value.
    */
    bool ParseDateTime(const wxString& datetime, wxString::const_iterator *end);
    /**
        This function parses the string @a date according to the given
        @e format. The system @c strptime(3) function is used whenever
        available, but even if it is not, this function is still implemented,
        although support for locale-dependent format specifiers such as
        @c "%c", @c "%x" or @c "%X" may not be perfect and GNU extensions such
        as @c "%z" and @c "%Z" are not implemented. This function does handle
        the month and weekday names in the current locale on all platforms,
        however.
        Please see the description of the ANSI C function @c strftime(3) for
        the syntax of the format string.
        The @a dateDef parameter is used to fill in the fields which could not
        be determined from the format string. For example, if the format is
        @c "%d" (the day of the month), the month and the year are taken from
        @a dateDef. If it is not specified, Today() is used as the default
        date.
        Example of using this function:
        @code
            wxDateTime dt;
            wxString str = "...";
            wxString::const_iterator end;
            if ( !dt.ParseFormat(str, "%Y-%m-%d", &end) )
                ... parsing failed ...
            else if ( end == str.end() )
                ... entire string parsed ...
            else
                ... wxString(end, str.end()) left over ...
        @endcode
        @param date
            The string to be parsed.
        @param format
            strptime()-like format string.
        @param dateDef
            Used to fill in the date components not specified in the @a date
            string.
        @param end
            Will be filled with the iterator pointing to the location where the
            parsing stopped if the function returns @true. If the entire string
            was consumed, it is set to @c date.end(). Notice that this argument
            must be non-@NULL.
        @return
            @true if at least part of the string was parsed successfully,
            @false otherwise.
        @see Format()
    */
    bool ParseFormat(const wxString& date,
                     const wxString& format,
                     const wxDateTime& dateDef,
                     wxString::const_iterator *end);
    /**
        @overload
    */
    bool ParseFormat(const wxString& date,
                     const wxString& format,
                     wxString::const_iterator *end);
    /**
        @overload
    */
    bool ParseFormat(const wxString& date, wxString::const_iterator *end);
    /**
        This function parses the string containing the date and time in ISO
        8601 combined format @c "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS". The separator between
        the date and time parts must be equal to @a sep for the function to
        succeed.
        @return @true if the entire string was parsed successfully, @false
                 otherwise.
    */
    bool ParseISOCombined(const wxString& date, char sep = 'T');
    /**
        This function parses the date in ISO 8601 format @c "YYYY-MM-DD".
        @return @true if the entire string was parsed successfully, @false
                 otherwise.
    */
    bool ParseISODate(const wxString& date);
    /**
        This function parses the time in ISO 8601 format @c "HH:MM:SS".
        @return @true if the entire string was parsed successfully, @false
                 otherwise.
    */
    bool ParseISOTime(const wxString& date);
    /**
        Parses the string @a date looking for a date formatted according to the
        RFC 822 in it. The exact description of this format may, of course, be
        found in the RFC (section 5), but, briefly, this is the format used in
        the headers of Internet email messages and one of the most common
        strings expressing date in this format may be something like
        @c "Sat, 18 Dec 1999 00:48:30 +0100".
        Returns @NULL if the conversion failed, otherwise return the pointer to
        the character immediately following the part of the string which could
        be parsed. If the entire string contains only the date in RFC 822
        format, the returned pointer will be pointing to a @c NUL character.
        This function is intentionally strict, it will return an error for any
        string which is not RFC 822 compliant. If you need to parse date
        formatted in more free ways, you should use ParseDateTime() or
        ParseDate() instead.
        See ParseFormat() for the description of function parameters and return
        value.
    */
    bool ParseRfc822Date(const wxString& date, wxString::const_iterator *end);
    /**
        This functions is like ParseDateTime(), but only allows the time to be
        specified in the input string.
        See ParseFormat() for the description of function parameters and return
        value.
    */
    bool ParseTime(const wxString& time, wxString::const_iterator *end);
    //@}
    /**
        @name Calendar Calculations
        The functions in this section perform the basic calendar calculations,
        mostly related to the week days. They allow to find the given week day
        in the week with given number (either in the month or in the year) and
        so on.
        None of the functions in this section modify the time part of the
        wxDateTime, they only work with the date part of it.
    */
    //@{
    /**
        Returns the copy of this object to which SetToLastMonthDay() was
        applied.
    */
    wxDateTime GetLastMonthDay(Month month = Inv_Month,
                               int year = Inv_Year) const;
    /**
        Returns the copy of this object to which SetToLastWeekDay() was
        applied.
    */
    wxDateTime GetLastWeekDay(WeekDay weekday, Month month = Inv_Month,
                              int year = Inv_Year);
    /**
        Returns the copy of this object to which SetToNextWeekDay() was
        applied.
    */
    wxDateTime GetNextWeekDay(WeekDay weekday) const;
    /**
        Returns the copy of this object to which SetToPrevWeekDay() was
        applied.
    */
    wxDateTime GetPrevWeekDay(WeekDay weekday) const;
    /**
        Returns the copy of this object to which SetToWeekDay() was applied.
    */
    wxDateTime GetWeekDay(WeekDay weekday, int n = 1, Month month = Inv_Month,
                          int year = Inv_Year) const;
    /**
        Returns the copy of this object to which SetToWeekDayInSameWeek() was
        applied.
    */
    wxDateTime GetWeekDayInSameWeek(WeekDay weekday,
                                    WeekFlags flags = Monday_First) const;
    /**
        Returns the copy of this object to which SetToYearDay() was applied.
    */
    wxDateTime GetYearDay(wxDateTime_t yday) const;
    /**
        Sets the date to the last day in the specified month (the current one
        by default).
        @return The reference to the modified object itself.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetToLastMonthDay(Month month = Inv_Month, int year = Inv_Year);
    /**
        The effect of calling this function is the same as of calling
        @c SetToWeekDay(-1, weekday, month, year). The date will be set to the
        last @a weekday in the given month and year (the current ones by
        default). Always returns @true.
    */
    bool SetToLastWeekDay(WeekDay weekday, Month month = Inv_Month,
                          int year = Inv_Year);
    /**
        Sets the date so that it will be the first @a weekday following the
        current date.
        @return The reference to the modified object itself.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetToNextWeekDay(WeekDay weekday);
    /**
        Sets the date so that it will be the last @a weekday before the current
        date.
        @return The reference to the modified object itself.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetToPrevWeekDay(WeekDay weekday);
    /**
        Sets the date to the @e n-th @a weekday in the given month of the given
        year (the current month and year are used by default). The parameter
        @a n may be either positive (counting from the beginning of the month)
        or negative (counting from the end of it).
        For example, SetToWeekDay(2, wxDateTime::Wed) will set the date to the
        second Wednesday in the current month and
        SetToWeekDay(-1, wxDateTime::Sun) will set the date to the last Sunday
        in the current month.
        @return @true if the date was modified successfully, @false otherwise
                 meaning that the specified date doesn't exist.
    */
    bool SetToWeekDay(WeekDay weekday, int n = 1,
                       Month month = Inv_Month, int year = Inv_Year);
    /**
        Adjusts the date so that it will still lie in the same week as before,
        but its week day will be the given one.
        @return The reference to the modified object itself.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetToWeekDayInSameWeek(WeekDay weekday,
                                      WeekFlags flags = Monday_First);
    /**
        Sets the date to the day number @a yday in the same year (i.e.\ unlike
        the other functions, this one does not use the current year). The day
        number should be in the range 1-366 for the leap years and 1-365 for
        the other ones.
        @return The reference to the modified object itself.
    */
    wxDateTime& SetToYearDay(wxDateTime_t yday);
    //@}
    /**
        @name Astronomical/Historical Functions
        Some degree of support for the date units used in astronomy and/or
        history is provided. You can construct a wxDateTime object from a
        JDN and you may also get its JDN, MJD or Rata Die number from it.
        Related functions in other groups: wxDateTime(double), Set(double)
    */
    //@{
    /**
        Synonym for GetJulianDayNumber().
    */
    double GetJDN() const;
    /**
        Returns the JDN corresponding to this date. Beware of rounding errors!
        @see GetModifiedJulianDayNumber()
    */
    double GetJulianDayNumber() const;
    /**
        Synonym for GetModifiedJulianDayNumber().
    */
    double GetMJD() const;
    /**
        Returns the @e "Modified Julian Day Number" (MJD) which is, by
        definition, is equal to JDN - 2400000.5.
        The MJDs are simpler to work with as the integral MJDs correspond to
        midnights of the dates in the Gregorian calendar and not the noons like
        JDN. The MJD 0 represents Nov 17, 1858.
    */
    double GetModifiedJulianDayNumber() const;
    /**
        Return the @e Rata Die number of this date.
        By definition, the Rata Die number is a date specified as the number of
        days relative to a base date of December 31 of the year 0. Thus January
        1 of the year 1 is Rata Die day 1.
    */
    double GetRataDie() const;
    //@}
    /**
        @name Time Zone and DST Support
        Please see the @ref overview_datetime_timezones "time zone overview"
        for more information about time zones. Normally, these functions should
        be rarely used.
        Note that all functions in this section always use the current offset
        for the specified time zone and don't take into account its possibly
        different historical value at the given date.
        Related functions in other groups: GetBeginDST(), GetEndDST()
    */
    //@{
    /**
        Transform the date from the given time zone to the local one.
        If @a noDST is @true, no DST adjustments will be made.
        If @a tz parameter is wxDateTime::Local, no adjustment is performed.
        @return The date adjusted by the different between the given and the
        local time zones.
    */
    wxDateTime FromTimezone(const TimeZone& tz, bool noDST = false) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the DST is applied for this date in the given country.
        @see GetBeginDST(), GetEndDST()
    */
    int IsDST(Country country = Country_Default) const;
    /**
        Same as FromTimezone() but modifies the object in place.
    */
    wxDateTime& MakeFromTimezone(const TimeZone& tz, bool noDST = false);
    /**
        Modifies the object in place to represent the date in another time
        zone.
        If @a noDST is @true, no DST adjustments will be made.
    */
    wxDateTime& MakeTimezone(const TimeZone& tz, bool noDST = false);
    /**
        This is the same as calling MakeTimezone() with the argument @c GMT0.
    */
    wxDateTime& MakeUTC(bool noDST = false);
    /**
        Transform the date to the given time zone.
        If @a noDST is @true, no DST adjustments will be made.
        If @a tz parameter is wxDateTime::Local, no adjustment is performed.
        @return The date adjusted by the different between the local and the
        given time zones.
    */
    wxDateTime ToTimezone(const TimeZone& tz, bool noDST = false) const;
    /**
        This is the same as calling ToTimezone() with the argument @c GMT0.
    */
    wxDateTime ToUTC(bool noDST = false) const;
    //@}
    /**
        Converts the year in absolute notation (i.e.\ a number which can be
        negative, positive or zero) to the year in BC/AD notation. For the
        positive years, nothing is done, but the year 0 is year 1 BC and so for
        other years there is a difference of 1.
        This function should be used like this:
        @code
        wxDateTime dt(...);
        int y = dt.GetYear();
        printf("The year is %d%s", wxDateTime::ConvertYearToBC(y), y > 0 ? "AD" : "BC");
        @endcode
    */
    static int ConvertYearToBC(int year);
    /**
        Returns the translations of the strings @c AM and @c PM used for time
        formatting for the current locale. Either of the pointers may be @NULL
        if the corresponding value is not needed.
    */
    static void GetAmPmStrings(wxString* am, wxString* pm);
    /**
        Get the beginning of DST for the given country in the given year
        (current one by default). This function suffers from limitations
        described in the @ref overview_datetime_dst "DST overview".
        @see GetEndDST()
    */
    static wxDateTime GetBeginDST(int year = Inv_Year,
                                   Country country = Country_Default);
    /**
        Returns the end of DST for the given country in the given year (current
        one by default).
        @see GetBeginDST()
    */
    static wxDateTime GetEndDST(int year = Inv_Year,
                                 Country country = Country_Default);
    /**
        Get the current century, i.e.\ first two digits of the year, in given
        calendar (only Gregorian is currently supported).
    */
    static int GetCentury(int year);
    /**
        Returns the current default country. The default country is used for
        DST calculations, for example.
        @see SetCountry()
    */
    static Country GetCountry();
    /**
        Get the current month in given calendar (only Gregorian is currently
        supported).
    */
    static Month GetCurrentMonth(Calendar cal = Gregorian);
    /**
        Get the current year in given calendar (only Gregorian is currently
        supported).
    */
    static int GetCurrentYear(Calendar cal = Gregorian);
    /**
        Return the standard English name of the given month.
        This function always returns "January" or "Jan" for January, use
        GetMonthName() to retrieve the name of the month in the users current
        locale.
        @param month
            One of wxDateTime::Jan, ..., wxDateTime::Dec values.
        @param flags
            Either Name_Full (default) or Name_Abbr.
        @see GetEnglishWeekDayName()
        @since 2.9.0
     */
    static wxString GetEnglishMonthName(Month month,
                                        NameFlags flags = Name_Full);
    /**
        Return the standard English name of the given week day.
        This function always returns "Monday" or "Mon" for Monday, use
        GetWeekDayName() to retrieve the name of the month in the users current
        locale.
        @param weekday
            One of wxDateTime::Sun, ..., wxDateTime::Sat values.
        @param flags
            Either Name_Full (default) or Name_Abbr.
        @see GetEnglishMonthName()
        @since 2.9.0
     */
    static wxString GetEnglishWeekDayName(WeekDay weekday,
                                          NameFlags flags = Name_Full);
    /**
        Gets the full (default) or abbreviated name of the given month.
        This function returns the name in the current locale, use
        GetEnglishMonthName() to get the untranslated name if necessary.
        @param month
            One of wxDateTime::Jan, ..., wxDateTime::Dec values.
        @param flags
            Either Name_Full (default) or Name_Abbr.
        @see GetWeekDayName()
    */
    static wxString GetMonthName(Month month, NameFlags flags = Name_Full);
    /**
        Returns the number of days in the given year. The only supported value
        for @a cal currently is @c Gregorian.
    */
    static wxDateTime_t GetNumberOfDays(int year, Calendar cal = Gregorian);
    /**
        Returns the number of days in the given month of the given year. The
        only supported value for @a cal currently is @c Gregorian.
    */
    static wxDateTime_t GetNumberOfDays(Month month, int year = Inv_Year,
                                        Calendar cal = Gregorian);
    /**
        Returns the current time.
    */
    static time_t GetTimeNow();
    /**
        Returns the current time broken down using the buffer whose address is
        passed to the function with @a tm to store the result.
    */
    static tm* GetTmNow(struct tm *tm);
    /**
        Returns the current time broken down. Note that this function returns a
        pointer to a static buffer that's reused by calls to this function and
        certain C library functions (e.g. localtime). If there is any chance
        your code might be used in a multi-threaded application, you really
        should use GetTmNow(struct tm *) instead.
    */
    static tm* GetTmNow();
    /**
        Gets the full (default) or abbreviated name of the given week day.
        This function returns the name in the current locale, use
        GetEnglishWeekDayName() to get the untranslated name if necessary.
        @param weekday
            One of wxDateTime::Sun, ..., wxDateTime::Sat values.
        @param flags
            Either Name_Full (default) or Name_Abbr.
        @see GetMonthName()
    */
    static wxString GetWeekDayName(WeekDay weekday,
                                   NameFlags flags = Name_Full);
    /**
        Returns @true if DST was used in the given year (the current one by
        default) in the given country.
    */
    static bool IsDSTApplicable(int year = Inv_Year,
                                  Country country = Country_Default);
    /**
         Acquires the first weekday of a week based on locale and/or OS settings.
         If the information was not available, returns @c Sun.
         @param firstDay
             The address of a WeekDay variable to which the first weekday will be
             assigned to.
         @return If the first day could not be determined, returns false,
             and @a firstDay is set to a fallback value.
         @since 3.1.1
    */
    static bool GetFirstWeekDay(WeekDay *firstDay);
    /**
        Returns @true if the @a year is a leap one in the specified calendar.
        This functions supports Gregorian and Julian calendars.
    */
    static bool IsLeapYear(int year = Inv_Year, Calendar cal = Gregorian);
    /**
        This function returns @true if the specified (or default) country is
        one of Western European ones. It is used internally by wxDateTime to
        determine the DST convention and date and time formatting rules.
    */
    static bool IsWestEuropeanCountry(Country country = Country_Default);
    /**
        Returns the object corresponding to the current time.
        Example:
        @code
        wxDateTime now = wxDateTime::Now();
        printf("Current time in Paris:\t%s\n", now.Format("%c", wxDateTime::CET).c_str());
        @endcode
        @note This function is accurate up to seconds. UNow() can be used if
              better precision is required.
        @see Today()
    */
    static wxDateTime Now();
    /**
        Sets the country to use by default. This setting influences the DST
        calculations, date formatting and other things.
        @see GetCountry()
    */
    static void SetCountry(Country country);
    /**
        Set the date to the given @a weekday in the week number @a numWeek of
        the given @a year . The number should be in range 1-53.
        Note that the returned date may be in a different year than the one
        passed to this function because both the week 1 and week 52 or 53 (for
        leap years) contain days from different years. See GetWeekOfYear() for
        the explanation of how the year weeks are counted.
    */
    static wxDateTime SetToWeekOfYear(int year, wxDateTime_t numWeek,
                                       WeekDay weekday = Mon);
    /**
        Returns the object corresponding to the midnight of the current day
        (i.e.\ the same as Now(), but the time part is set to 0).
        @see Now()
    */
    static wxDateTime Today();
    /**
        Returns the object corresponding to the current UTC time including the
        milliseconds.
        Notice that unlike Now(), this method creates a wxDateTime object
        corresponding to UTC, not local, time.
        @see Now(), wxGetUTCTimeMillis()
    */
    static wxDateTime UNow();
};
/**
    Global instance of an empty wxDateTime object.
    @todo Would it be better to rename this wxNullDateTime so it's consistent
          with the rest of the "empty/invalid/null" global objects?
*/
const wxDateTime wxDefaultDateTime;
/*
    wxInvalidDateTime is an alias for wxDefaultDateTime.
*/
#define wxInvalidDateTime wxDefaultDateTime
/**
    @class wxDateTimeWorkDays
    @todo Write wxDateTimeWorkDays documentation.
    @library{wxbase}
    @category{data}
*/
class wxDateTimeWorkDays
{
public:
};
/**
    @class wxDateSpan
    This class is a "logical time span" and is useful for implementing program
    logic for such things as "add one month to the date" which, in general,
    doesn't mean to add 60*60*24*31 seconds to it, but to take the same date
    the next month (to understand that this is indeed different consider adding
    one month to Feb, 15 -- we want to get Mar, 15, of course).
    When adding a month to the date, all lesser components (days, hours, ...)
    won't be changed unless the resulting date would be invalid: for example,
    Jan 31 + 1 month will be Feb 28, not (non-existing) Feb 31.
    Because of this feature, adding and subtracting back again the same
    wxDateSpan will @b not, in general, give back the original date: Feb 28 - 1
    month will be Jan 28, not Jan 31!
    wxDateSpan objects can be either positive or negative. They may be
    multiplied by scalars which multiply all deltas by the scalar: i.e.
    2*(1  month and  1  day) is 2 months and 2 days. They can be added together
    with wxDateTime or wxTimeSpan, but the type of result is different for each
    case.
    @warning If you specify both weeks and days, the total number of days added
             will be 7*weeks + days! See also GetTotalDays().
    Equality operators are defined for wxDateSpans. Two wxDateSpans are equal
    if and only if they both give the same target date when added to @b every
    source date. Thus wxDateSpan::Months(1) is not equal to
    wxDateSpan::Days(30), because they don't give the same date when added to
    Feb 1st. But wxDateSpan::Days(14) is equal to wxDateSpan::Weeks(2).
    Finally, notice that for adding hours, minutes and so on you don't need
    this class at all: wxTimeSpan will do the job because there are no
    subtleties associated with those (we don't support leap seconds).
    @library{wxbase}
    @category{data}
    @see @ref overview_datetime, wxDateTime
*/
class wxDateSpan
{
public:
    /**
        Constructs the date span object for the given number of years, months,
        weeks and days. Note that the weeks and days add together if both are
        given.
    */
    wxDateSpan(int years = 0, int months = 0, int weeks = 0, int days = 0);
    /**
        Returns the sum of two date spans.
        @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
    */
    wxDateSpan Add(const wxDateSpan& other) const;
    /**
        Adds the given wxDateSpan to this wxDateSpan and returns a reference
        to itself.
    */
    wxDateSpan& Add(const wxDateSpan& other);
    /**
        Returns a date span object corresponding to one day.
        @see Days()
    */
    static wxDateSpan Day();
    /**
        Returns a date span object corresponding to the given number of days.
        @see Day()
    */
    static wxDateSpan Days(int days);
    /**
        Returns the number of days (not counting the weeks component) in this
        date span.
        @see GetTotalDays()
    */
    int GetDays() const;
    /**
        Returns the number of the months (not counting the years) in this date
        span.
    */
    int GetMonths() const;
    /**
        Returns the combined number of months in this date span, counting both
        years and months.
        @see GetYears(), GetMonths()
        @since 2.9.5
    */
    int GetTotalMonths() const;
    /**
        Returns the combined number of days in this date span, counting both
        weeks and days. This doesn't take months or years into account.
        @see GetWeeks(), GetDays()
    */
    int GetTotalDays() const;
    /**
        Returns the number of weeks in this date span.
        @see GetTotalDays()
    */
    int GetWeeks() const;
    /**
        Returns the number of years in this date span.
    */
    int GetYears() const;
    /**
        Returns a date span object corresponding to one month.
        @see Months()
    */
    static wxDateSpan Month();
    /**
        Returns a date span object corresponding to the given number of months.
        @see Month()
    */
    static wxDateSpan Months(int mon);
    /**
        Returns the product of the date span by the specified @a factor. The
        product is computed by multiplying each of the components by the
        @a factor.
        @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
    */
    wxDateSpan Multiply(int factor) const;
    /**
        Multiplies this date span by the specified @a factor. The product is
        computed by multiplying each of the components by the @a factor.
        @return A reference to this wxDateSpan object modified in place.
    */
    wxDateSpan& Multiply(int factor);
    /**
        Changes the sign of this date span.
        @see Negate()
    */
    wxDateSpan& Neg();
    /**
        Returns a date span with the opposite sign.
        @see Neg()
    */
    wxDateSpan Negate() const;
    /**
        Sets the number of days (without modifying any other components) in
        this date span.
    */
    wxDateSpan& SetDays(int n);
    /**
        Sets the number of months (without modifying any other components) in
        this date span.
    */
    wxDateSpan& SetMonths(int n);
    /**
        Sets the number of weeks (without modifying any other components) in
        this date span.
    */
    wxDateSpan& SetWeeks(int n);
    /**
        Sets the number of years (without modifying any other components) in
        this date span.
    */
    wxDateSpan& SetYears(int n);
    /**
        Returns the difference of two date spans.
        @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
    */
    wxDateSpan Subtract(const wxDateSpan& other) const;
    /**
        Subtracts the given wxDateSpan to this wxDateSpan and returns a
        reference to itself.
    */
    wxDateSpan& Subtract(const wxDateSpan& other);
    /**
        Returns a date span object corresponding to one week.
        @see Weeks()
    */
    static wxDateSpan Week();
    /**
        Returns a date span object corresponding to the given number of weeks.
        @see Week()
    */
    static wxDateSpan Weeks(int weeks);
    /**
        Returns a date span object corresponding to one year.
        @see Years()
    */
    static wxDateSpan Year();
    /**
        Returns a date span object corresponding to the given number of years.
        @see Year()
    */
    static wxDateSpan Years(int years);
    /**
        Adds the given wxDateSpan to this wxDateSpan and returns the result.
    */
    wxDateSpan& operator+=(const wxDateSpan& other);
    /**
        Subtracts the given wxDateSpan to this wxDateSpan and returns the
        result.
    */
    wxDateSpan& operator-=(const wxDateSpan& other);
    /**
        Changes the sign of this date span.
        @see Negate()
    */
    wxDateSpan& operator-();
    /**
        Multiplies this date span by the specified @a factor. The product is
        computed by multiplying each of the components by the @a factor.
        @return A reference to this wxDateSpan object modified in place.
    */
    wxDateSpan& operator*=(int factor);
    /**
        Returns @true if this date span is different from the other one.
    */
    bool operator!=(const wxDateSpan& other) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if this date span is equal to the other one. Two date
        spans are considered equal if and only if they have the same number of
        years and months and the same total number of days (counting both days
        and weeks).
    */
    bool operator==(const wxDateSpan& other) const;
};
/**
    @class wxTimeSpan
    wxTimeSpan class represents a time interval.
    @library{wxbase}
    @category{data}
    @see @ref overview_datetime, wxDateTime
*/
class wxTimeSpan
{
public:
    /**
        Default constructor, constructs a zero timespan.
    */
    wxTimeSpan();
    /**
        Constructs timespan from separate values for each component, with the
        date set to 0. Hours are not restricted to 0-24 range, neither are
        minutes, seconds or milliseconds.
    */
    wxTimeSpan(long hours, long min = 0, wxLongLong sec = 0, wxLongLong msec = 0);
    /**
        Returns the absolute value of the timespan: does not modify the object.
    */
    wxTimeSpan Abs() const;
    /**
        Returns the sum of two time spans.
        @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
    */
    wxTimeSpan Add(const wxTimeSpan& diff) const;
    /**
        Adds the given wxTimeSpan to this wxTimeSpan and returns a reference
        to itself.
    */
    wxTimeSpan& Add(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
    /**
        Returns the timespan for one day.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Day();
    /**
        Returns the timespan for the given number of days.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Days(long days);
    /**
        Returns the string containing the formatted representation of the time
        span. The following format specifiers are allowed after %:
        - @c H - Number of Hours
        - @c M - Number of Minutes
        - @c S - Number of Seconds
        - @c l - Number of Milliseconds
        - @c D - Number of Days
        - @c E - Number of Weeks
        - @c % - The percent character
        Note that, for example, the number of hours in the description above is
        not well defined: it can be either the total number of hours (for
        example, for a time span of 50 hours this would be 50) or just the hour
        part of the time span, which would be 2 in this case as 50 hours is
        equal to 2 days and 2 hours.
        wxTimeSpan resolves this ambiguity in the following way: if there had
        been, indeed, the @c %D format specified preceding the @c %H, then it
        is interpreted as 2. Otherwise, it is 50.
        The same applies to all other format specifiers: if they follow a
        specifier of larger unit, only the rest part is taken, otherwise the
        full value is used.
    */
    wxString Format(const wxString& format = wxDefaultTimeSpanFormat) const;
    /**
        Returns the difference in number of days.
    */
    int GetDays() const;
    /**
        Returns the difference in number of hours.
    */
    int GetHours() const;
    /**
        Returns the difference in number of milliseconds.
    */
    wxLongLong GetMilliseconds() const;
    /**
        Returns the difference in number of minutes.
    */
    int GetMinutes() const;
    /**
        Returns the difference in number of seconds.
    */
    wxLongLong GetSeconds() const;
    /**
        Returns the internal representation of timespan.
    */
    wxLongLong GetValue() const;
    /**
        Returns the difference in number of weeks.
    */
    int GetWeeks() const;
    /**
        Returns the timespan for one hour.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Hour();
    /**
        Returns the timespan for the given number of hours.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Hours(long hours);
    /**
        Returns @true if two timespans are equal.
    */
    bool IsEqualTo(const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
    /**
        Compares two timespans: works with the absolute values, i.e.\ -2 hours
        is longer than 1 hour. Also, it will return @false if the timespans are
        equal in absolute value.
    */
    bool IsLongerThan(const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the timespan is negative.
    */
    bool IsNegative() const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the timespan is empty.
    */
    bool IsNull() const;
    /**
        Returns @true if the timespan is positive.
    */
    bool IsPositive() const;
    /**
        Compares two timespans: works with the absolute values, i.e.\ 1 hour is
        shorter than -2 hours. Also, it will return @false if the timespans are
        equal in absolute value.
    */
    bool IsShorterThan(const wxTimeSpan& ts) const;
    /**
        Returns the timespan for one millisecond.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Millisecond();
    /**
        Returns the timespan for the given number of milliseconds.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Milliseconds(wxLongLong ms);
    /**
        Returns the timespan for one minute.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Minute();
    /**
        Returns the timespan for the given number of minutes.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Minutes(long min);
    /**
        Returns the product of this time span by @a n.
        @return A new wxTimeSpan object with the result.
    */
    wxTimeSpan Multiply(int n) const;
    /**
        Multiplies this time span by @a n.
        @return A reference to this wxTimeSpan object modified in place.
    */
    wxTimeSpan& Multiply(int n);
    /**
        Negate the value of the timespan.
        @see Negate()
    */
    wxTimeSpan& Neg();
    /**
        Returns timespan with inverted sign.
        @see Neg()
    */
    wxTimeSpan Negate() const;
    /**
        Returns the timespan for one second.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Second();
    /**
        Returns the timespan for the given number of seconds.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Seconds(wxLongLong sec);
    /**
        Returns the difference of two time spans.
        @return A new wxDateSpan object with the result.
    */
    wxTimeSpan Subtract(const wxTimeSpan& diff) const;
    /**
        Subtracts the given wxTimeSpan to this wxTimeSpan and returns a
        reference to itself.
    */
    wxTimeSpan& Subtract(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
    /**
        Returns the timespan for one week.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Week();
    /**
        Returns the timespan for the given number of weeks.
    */
    static wxTimeSpan Weeks(long weeks);
    /**
        Adds the given wxTimeSpan to this wxTimeSpan and returns the result.
    */
    wxTimeSpan& operator+=(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
    /**
        Multiplies this time span by @a n.
        @return A reference to this wxTimeSpan object modified in place.
    */
    wxTimeSpan& operator*=(int n);
    /**
        Negate the value of the timespan.
        @see Negate()
    */
    wxTimeSpan& operator-();
    /**
        Subtracts the given wxTimeSpan to this wxTimeSpan and returns the
        result.
    */
    wxTimeSpan& operator-=(const wxTimeSpan& diff);
};
/**
    @class wxDateTimeHolidayAuthority
    @todo Write wxDateTimeHolidayAuthority documentation.
    @library{wxbase}
    @category{data}
*/
class wxDateTimeHolidayAuthority
{
public:
};