ref: e2d6d402f1a4a063b3549cb2e988a6e978858579
dir: /sys/man/1/calendar/
.TH CALENDAR 1 .SH NAME calendar \- print upcoming events .SH SYNOPSIS .B calendar [ .B -dy ] [ .B -p .I days ] [ .I file ... ] .SH DESCRIPTION .I Calendar reads the named files, default .BR /usr/$user/lib/calendar , and writes to standard output any lines containing today's or tomorrow's date. Examples of recognized date formats are "4/11", "April 11", "Apr 11", "11 April", and "11 Apr". A special form may be used to represent weekly and monthly events: "Every Tuesday" "The third Wednesday" All comparisons are case insensitive. .PP If the .B -y flag is given, an attempt is made to match on year too. In this case, dates of the forms listed above will be accepted if they are followed by the current year (or last two digits thereof) or not a year — digits not followed by white space or non-digits. .PP If the .B -p flag is given, its argument is the number of days ahead to match dates. This flag is not repeatable, and it performs no special processing at the end of the week. .PP The .B -d flag enables debugging output. .PP On Friday and Saturday, events through Monday are printed. .PP To have your calendar mailed to you every day, use .IR cron (8). .SH FILES .TF /usr/$user/lib/calendar .TP .B /usr/$user/lib/calendar personal calendar .SH SOURCE .B /sys/src/cmd/calendar.c