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- .TH CALENDAR 1
- .SH NAME
- calendar \- print upcoming events
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .B calendar
- [
- .B \-y
- ]
- [
- .B \-p days
- ]
- [
- .I file ...
- ]
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- .I Calendar
- reads the named files, default
- .BR /usr/$user/lib/calendar ,
- and writes to standard output any lines
- containing today's or tomorrow's date.
- Examples of recognized date formats are
- "4/11",
- "April 11",
- "Apr 11",
- "11 April",
- and
- "11 Apr".
- All comparisons are case insensitive.
- .PP
- If the
- .B \-y
- flag is given, an attempt is made to match on year too. In this case,
- dates of the forms listed above will be accepted if they are followed
- by the current year (or last two digits thereof) or not a year —
- digits not followed by white space or non-digits.
- .PP
- If the
- .B \-p
- flag is given, its argument is the number of days ahead to match
- dates. This flag is not repeatable, and it performs no special
- processing at the end of the week.
- .PP
- On Friday and Saturday, events through Monday are printed.
- .PP
- To have your calendar mailed to you every day, use
- .IR cron (8).
- .SH FILES
- .TF /usr/$user/lib/calendar
- .TP
- .B /usr/$user/lib/calendar
- personal calendar
- .SH SOURCE
- .B /sys/src/cmd/calendar.c
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