paul@290 | 1 | Navigation Controls
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paul@290 | 2 | -------------------
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paul@290 | 3 |
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paul@290 | 4 | The "New event" link should probably not be present when only remote events
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paul@290 | 5 | are being aggregated by a calendar.
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paul@290 | 6 |
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paul@218 | 7 | Points in Time
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paul@218 | 8 | --------------
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paul@218 | 9 |
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paul@218 | 10 | Consider making dates convertible to timespans of the form (start of day,
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paul@218 | 11 | start of next day).
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paul@218 | 12 |
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paul@211 | 13 | Localised Keywords
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paul@211 | 14 | ------------------
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paul@211 | 15 |
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paul@211 | 16 | It should be possible to define events using localised equivalents of "start",
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paul@211 | 17 | "end", "summary" and so on. To achieve this, the page language would be found
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paul@211 | 18 | and regular expressions built to use the localised keywords, falling back on
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paul@211 | 19 | the English keywords, would then search for event details.
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paul@211 | 20 |
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paul@211 | 21 | Recurring Events
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paul@211 | 22 | ----------------
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paul@211 | 23 |
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paul@232 | 24 | Recurring event information from iCalendar sources should be considered in
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paul@232 | 25 | order to avoid showing incomplete or incorrect event datetimes. Ultimately,
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paul@232 | 26 | such information may need to be parsed and incorporated into the general event
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paul@232 | 27 | recurrence processing.
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paul@232 | 28 |
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paul@211 | 29 | Having events recur at certain intervals would potentially involve the
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paul@211 | 30 | expansion of events to produce multiple instances within a specified period of
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paul@211 | 31 | interest, and such expansion could occur after an event's details have been
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paul@211 | 32 | read. Care would need to be taken in cases where no limits are placed on a
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paul@211 | 33 | calendar: the expanded instances should not be allowed to recede into the past
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paul@211 | 34 | and future indefinitely; where no other events exist to provide implicit
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paul@211 | 35 | limits, some other default limits might be required to let the expansion
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paul@211 | 36 | occur.
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paul@211 | 37 |
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paul@211 | 38 | The description of recurring events could be based on the iCalendar
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paul@211 | 39 | specification, although simpler schemes could be preferable. Recurring event
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paul@211 | 40 | descriptions might start with "every" and then provide a time period ("day",
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paul@211 | 41 | "week", "month", "year") for offsets from a specified date or time, perhaps
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paul@211 | 42 | using qualifiers ("first", "second", "other", and so on), or instead provide a
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paul@211 | 43 | more complete description using additional qualifiers that may override any
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paul@211 | 44 | specified date or time for instances other than the primary occurrence. For
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paul@211 | 45 | example, "every second Wednesday of every other month".
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paul@211 | 46 |
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paul@227 | 47 | Possible grammar:
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paul@227 | 48 |
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paul@227 | 49 | <recurrence> [ of <recurrence> ]...
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paul@227 | 50 | [ from <datetime> ]
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paul@227 | 51 | [ until <datetime> ]
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paul@227 | 52 |
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paul@227 | 53 | recurrence = every [ <qualifier> ] <interval>
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paul@227 | 54 | interval = second | minute | hour | day | <weekday> | week | month | year
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paul@227 | 55 |
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paul@227 | 56 | The resolution of each successive <recurrence> must be lower than those it
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paul@227 | 57 | follows. Thus, "every second day of every second week..." is valid whereas
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paul@227 | 58 | "every second week of every second day..." is not.
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paul@227 | 59 |
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paul@204 | 60 | Map Views
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paul@204 | 61 | ---------
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paul@204 | 62 |
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paul@218 | 63 | Other projections might be supported. This would be necessary for various
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paul@218 | 64 | retrieved map images.
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paul@218 | 65 |
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paul@204 | 66 | Dynamic images obtained from other sites or generated locally might provide some
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paul@204 | 67 | enhancements to the map view. For example, a weather/radar image might show the
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paul@204 | 68 | cloud or rain forecast either for the current situation or, if forecasts are
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paul@204 | 69 | available, for the times of events shown.
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paul@204 | 70 |
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paul@204 | 71 | Consider having day numbers down the side of a map view with highlighted days
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paul@204 | 72 | indicating days having events, and with pop-up elements shown upon hovering over
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paul@204 | 73 | each highlighted day.
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paul@204 | 74 |
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paul@204 | 75 | To Do Items
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paul@204 | 76 | -----------
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paul@204 | 77 |
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paul@204 | 78 | Consider adding support for "to do" items. These might have time-related details
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paul@204 | 79 | such as deadlines, but are more likely to have relationships with other items,
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paul@204 | 80 | potentially forming a hierarchy of items.
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paul@204 | 81 |
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paul@204 | 82 | Event Section Parser
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paul@204 | 83 | --------------------
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paul@204 | 84 |
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paul@336 | 85 | Events in page sections/regions could be presented using more sophisticated
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paul@336 | 86 | methods and potentially be editable. To support direct editing, the parser
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paul@336 | 87 | would provide a hidden form field indicating the location of the section in
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paul@336 | 88 | the Wiki text, and the new event action would be enhanced to read existing
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paul@336 | 89 | events from the indicated page region, populating the form fields with the
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paul@336 | 90 | data found in the page.
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paul@242 | 91 |
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paul@242 | 92 | UID Properties
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paul@242 | 93 | --------------
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paul@242 | 94 |
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paul@242 | 95 | Especially in the case of aggregation from multiple sources, the only reliable
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paul@242 | 96 | way of avoiding repetition of the same events described in different places is
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paul@242 | 97 | for authors to include a UID property identifying each event, using the same
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paul@242 | 98 | value regardless of where the event is being published.
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paul@265 | 99 |
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paul@292 | 100 | Formatting in iCalendar Output
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paul@292 | 101 | ------------------------------
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paul@292 | 102 |
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paul@292 | 103 | If there is a reasonably standard way of incorporating Wiki text in iCalendar
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paul@292 | 104 | output alongside plain text, this would enable events aggregated from Wiki
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paul@292 | 105 | sources to use Wiki text to describe things like the location and topics of an
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paul@292 | 106 | event with links and other formatting that could then be reproduced in the
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paul@292 | 107 | aggregating Wiki.
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paul@292 | 108 |
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paul@265 | 109 | Remote Source Timeouts
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paul@265 | 110 | ----------------------
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paul@265 | 111 |
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paul@265 | 112 | Sometimes, network problems can cause delays in accessing remote sources. The
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paul@265 | 113 | library should support either a timeout mechanism or asynchronous retrieval of
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paul@265 | 114 | remote source data.
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