===== Usage ===== This chapter describes how to use icalendar. Components ---------- The following code examples use the following imports. .. code-block:: pycon >>> from icalendar import Calendar, Event Components are like case-insensitive dicts. The ``Calendar`` object is a component. The following example shows how to set two properties for it, then display them. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal = Calendar() >>> cal['dtstart'] = '20050404T080000' >>> cal['summary'] = 'Python meeting about calendaring' >>> for k,v in cal.items(): ... k,v ('DTSTART', '20050404T080000') ('SUMMARY', 'Python meeting about calendaring') .. note:: To add components to the calendar, create the :ref:`subcomponent `, then add it via :py:meth:`icalendar.Component.add()`. The example above adds a string, but not a ``vText`` component. You can generate a string for a file with the :py:meth:`icalendar.Component.to_ical` method. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal.to_ical() b'BEGIN:VCALENDAR\r\nDTSTART:20050404T080000\r\nSUMMARY:Python meeting about calendaring\r\nEND:VCALENDAR\r\n' The rendered view is easier to read. .. code-block:: pycon BEGIN:VCALENDAR DTSTART:20050404T080000 SUMMARY:Python meeting about calendaring END:VCALENDAR You can define a function to display :py:meth:`~icalendar.Component.to_ical` output, as shown in the following example. .. code-block:: pycon >>> def display(cal): ... return cal.to_ical().decode("utf-8").replace('\r\n', '\n').strip() You can set multiple properties, as shown in the following example. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal = Calendar() >>> cal['attendee'] = ['MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk','MAILTO:test@example.com'] >>> print(display(cal)) BEGIN:VCALENDAR ATTENDEE:MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk ATTENDEE:MAILTO:test@example.com END:VCALENDAR If you don't want to care about whether a property value is a list or a single value, use the :py:meth:`icalendar.Component.add()` method. It will automatically convert the property to a list of values if more than one value is added. Here is an example. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal = Calendar() >>> cal.add('attendee', 'MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk') >>> cal.add('attendee', 'MAILTO:test@example.com') >>> print(display(cal)) BEGIN:VCALENDAR ATTENDEE:MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk ATTENDEE:MAILTO:test@example.com END:VCALENDAR .. note:: This example doesn't check for compliance, so you should look in the :rfc:`5545` specification for legal properties for each component. You can also look in the :file:`icalendar/cal/calendar.py` file, where it is at least defined for each component. Subcomponents ------------- Any component can have subcomponents. For example, inside a calendar, there can be events. They can be arbitrarily nested. To demonstrate, first, make a new component. .. code-block:: pycon >>> event = Event() >>> event['uid'] = '42' >>> event['dtstart'] = '20050404T080000' Then append it to a parent. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal.add_component(event) >>> print(display(cal)) BEGIN:VCALENDAR ATTENDEE:MAILTO:maxm@mxm.dk ATTENDEE:MAILTO:test@example.com BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART:20050404T080000 UID:42 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR Subcomponents are appended to the subcomponents property on the component. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal.subcomponents [VEVENT({'UID': '42', 'DTSTART': '20050404T080000'})] Value types ----------- Property values are UTF-8 encoded strings. This is impractical if you want to use the data for further computation. The datetime format, for example, looks like `20050404T080000`. icalendar can parse and generate iCalendar formatted strings. You can either use the :py:meth:`~icalendar.Component.add()` method to do the work, or you can do it manually. To add a datetime value, you can use Python's built in :py:mod:`datetime` types, and the set the encode parameter to ``True``, and it will convert to the type defined in the specification. .. code-block:: pycon >>> from datetime import datetime >>> cal.add('dtstart', datetime(2005,4,4,8,0,0)) >>> cal['dtstart'].to_ical() b'20050404T080000' If that doesn't work satisfactorily for some reason, you can also do it manually. In :file:`icalendar/prop.py`, all the iCalendar data types are defined. Each type has a class that can parse and encode the type. Thus, to parse it manually, you would do the following. .. code-block:: pycon >>> from icalendar import vDatetime >>> now = datetime(2005,4,4,8,0,0) >>> vDatetime(now).to_ical() b'20050404T080000' To summarize, initialize the object with a Python built in type, then call the :py:meth:`~icalendar.Component.to_ical` method on the object. That will return an ical-encoded string. You can do it the other way around, too. To parse an encoded string, call the :py:meth:`~icalendar.Component.from_ical` method, and it will return an instance of the corresponding Python type. .. code-block:: pycon >>> vDatetime.from_ical('20050404T080000') datetime.datetime(2005, 4, 4, 8, 0) >>> vDatetime.from_ical('20050404T080000Z') datetime.datetime(2005, 4, 4, 8, 0, tzinfo=ZoneInfo(key='UTC')) You can also choose to use the :py:meth:`icalendar.Component.decoded` method, which will return a decoded value directly. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal = Calendar() >>> cal.add('dtstart', datetime(2005,4,4,8,0,0)) >>> cal['dtstart'].to_ical() b'20050404T080000' >>> cal.decoded('dtstart') datetime.datetime(2005, 4, 4, 8, 0) Property parameters ------------------- Property parameters are automatically added, depending on the input value. For example, for date or time related properties, the value type and timezone identifier, if applicable, are automatically added. .. code-block:: pycon >>> import zoneinfo >>> event = Event() >>> event.add('dtstart', datetime(2010, 10, 10, 10, 0, 0, ... tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("Europe/Vienna"))) >>> lines = event.to_ical().splitlines() >>> assert ( ... b"DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Vienna:20101010T100000" ... in lines) You can also add arbitrary property parameters by passing a parameters dictionary to the :py:meth:`~icalendar.Component.add()` method as shown. .. code-block:: pycon >>> event = Event() >>> event.add('X-TEST-PROP', 'tryout.', ... parameters={'prop1':'val1', 'prop2':'val2'}) >>> lines = event.to_ical().splitlines() >>> assert b"X-TEST-PROP;PROP1=val1;PROP2=val2:tryout." in lines Example ------- The following section is an example generating a complete iCal calendar file with a single event that can be loaded into the Mozilla calendar. Initialize the calendar. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal = Calendar() >>> from datetime import datetime >>> import zoneinfo Add some properties to be compliant with :rfc:`5545`. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal.add('prodid', '-//My calendar product//mxm.dk//') >>> cal.add('version', '2.0') At least one subcomponent is required for a calendar to be compliant. .. code-block:: pycon >>> event = Event() >>> event.add('summary', 'Python meeting about calendaring') >>> event.add('dtstart', datetime(2005,4,4,8,0,0,tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("UTC"))) >>> event.add('dtend', datetime(2005,4,4,10,0,0,tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("UTC"))) >>> event.add('dtstamp', datetime(2005,4,4,0,10,0,tzinfo=zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("UTC"))) Create a property with parameters. Notice that they are an attribute on the value. .. code-block:: pycon >>> from icalendar import vCalAddress, vText >>> organizer = vCalAddress('MAILTO:noone@example.com') Automatic encoding is not yet implemented for parameter values, so you must use the ``v*`` types which you can import from the icalendar :py:mod:`icalendar.prop` module. .. code-block:: pycon >>> organizer.params['cn'] = vText('Max Rasmussen') >>> organizer.params['role'] = vText('CHAIR') >>> event['organizer'] = organizer >>> event['location'] = vText('Odense, Denmark') >>> event['uid'] = '20050115T101010/27346262376@mxm.dk' >>> event.add('priority', 5) >>> attendee = vCalAddress('MAILTO:maxm@example.com') >>> attendee.params['cn'] = vText('Max Rasmussen') >>> attendee.params['ROLE'] = vText('REQ-PARTICIPANT') >>> event.add('attendee', attendee, encode=0) >>> attendee = vCalAddress('MAILTO:the-dude@example.com') >>> attendee.params['cn'] = vText('The Dude') >>> attendee.params['ROLE'] = vText('REQ-PARTICIPANT') >>> event.add('attendee', attendee, encode=0) Add the event to the calendar. .. code-block:: pycon >>> cal.add_component(event) By extending the event with subcomponents, you can create multiple alarms. .. code-block:: pycon >>> from icalendar import Alarm >>> from datetime import timedelta >>> alarm_1h_before = Alarm() >>> alarm_1h_before.add('action', 'DISPLAY') >>> alarm_1h_before.add('trigger', timedelta(hours=-1)) >>> alarm_1h_before.add('description', 'Reminder: Event in 1 hour') >>> event.add_component(alarm_1h_before) >>> alarm_24h_before = Alarm() >>> alarm_24h_before.add('action', 'DISPLAY') >>> alarm_24h_before.add('trigger', timedelta(hours=-24)) >>> alarm_24h_before.add('description', 'Reminder: Event in 24 hours') >>> event.add_component(alarm_24h_before) You can even add a recurrence, either from a dictionary or a string. Note that if you want to add the reccurence rule from a string, you must use the :py:class:`icalendar.prop.vRecur` property. Otherwise the rule will be escaped, making it invalid. .. code-block:: pycon >>> event.add('rrule', {'freq': 'daily'}) Write to disk. .. code-block:: pycon >>> import tempfile, os >>> directory = tempfile.mkdtemp() >>> f = open(os.path.join(directory, 'example.ics'), 'wb') >>> f.write(cal.to_ical()) 733 >>> f.close() Print out the calendar. .. code-block:: pycon >>> print(cal.to_ical().decode('utf-8')) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//My calendar product//mxm.dk// BEGIN:VEVENT SUMMARY:Python meeting about calendaring DTSTART:20050404T080000Z DTEND:20050404T100000Z DTSTAMP:20050404T001000Z UID:20050115T101010/27346262376@mxm.dk RRULE:FREQ=DAILY ATTENDEE;CN="Max Rasmussen";ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT:MAILTO:maxm@example.com ATTENDEE;CN="The Dude";ROLE=REQ-PARTICIPANT:MAILTO:the-dude@example.com LOCATION:Odense\, Denmark ORGANIZER;CN="Max Rasmussen";ROLE=CHAIR:MAILTO:noone@example.com PRIORITY:5 BEGIN:VALARM ACTION:DISPLAY DESCRIPTION:Reminder: Event in 1 hour TRIGGER:-PT1H END:VALARM BEGIN:VALARM ACTION:DISPLAY DESCRIPTION:Reminder: Event in 24 hours TRIGGER:-P1D END:VALARM END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR More examples ------------- The docstrings in the :py:mod:`icalendar` package API documentation provide other usage examples. The `tests `_ of icalendar also have more examples.