- From: Danny Ayers <danny@panlanka.net>
- Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2001 18:31:33 +0600
- To: "Charles McCathieNevile" <charles@w3.org>, "Greg FitzPatrick" <greg.fitzpatrick@metamatrix.se>
- Cc: <www-rdf-calendar@w3.org>
I think there's a very good point here - this calendar business has been in use for millennia by umpteen religions, based largely on solar and/or lunar cycles. This could well be a good starting point - either that or something like the Java 2 calendar model. Being able to give in your local religion, or rather your locale, and the system being aware of the implications would be very useful - for example here in Sri Lanka full moon (Poya) days are holidays, much like Sunday in the UK, except more things are shut. BTW, Happy New Year! (this weekend is Sinhalese & Tamil New Year ;-) <- On Thu, 12 Apr 2001, Greg FitzPatrick wrote: <- <- *Maundy Thursday <- <- Which reminds me: <- <- One of the things Iwanted to be able to do is work with <- different calendars <- - e.g. Muslim calendar, Jewish Calendar, comparison of modern Gregorian <- Calendar with older variants of such for historical purposes such as <- understanding why the "October Revolution" didn't happen in <- what I always <- imagine when I think of October 1917, etc. <- <- One of the best use cases I came up with was figuring out when Greek <- Orthodox churches and Australian Protestant churches celebrate <- easter at the <- same time. <- <- Thursday before first Sunday after first full moon after (southern <- hemisphere) autumn eqiunox is my belief about how to calculate maundy <- thursday for australian protestant churches. I don't actually <- know what part <- of the rule differs for greek churches, just that sometimes, <- like this year, <- easter is the same time, and sometimes it is different. <- <- So the important requirements: <- <- A way of talking about what calendar is being used, and of <- relating that to <- at least one other calendar. <- <- A way of specifying cyclic events (obvious requirement) <- <- A way of specifying one event as occurring based on the time of <- some other <- event <- <- For example: <- full moon occurs every 28.(a bit) days, and one of those days in ISO xxxx <- time is yyyy <- <- or <- Southern Hemisphere seasonal calendar <- Autumn Equinox occurs on northern hemisphere seasonal calendar <- spring Equinox <- <- or <- Anglican church of Australia Calendar <- Maundy Thursday 2001 occurs on ISO xxxxyyyyzzzz <- Good Friday 2001 occurs Greek Orthodox Church calendar Good <- Friday 2001 (??) <- Palm Sunday 2001 occurs z days after MyCalendar Beltane xyzyx <- <- cheers <- <- Chaals <- <- (PS a lot of calendaring is not religious, but a remarkable amount of it <- is...) <- <- -- <- Charles McCathieNevile http://www.w3.org/People/Charles <- phone: +61 409 134 136 <- W3C Web Accessibility Initiative http://www.w3.org/WAI <- fax: +1 617 258 5999 <- Location: 21 Mitchell street FOOTSCRAY Vic 3011, Australia <- (or W3C INRIA, Route des Lucioles, BP 93, 06902 Sophia Antipolis <- Cedex, France) <-
Received on Thursday, 12 April 2001 08:34:49 UTC