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iCalendar parser/generator

Project description

The icalendar package is a RFC 5545 compatible parser/generator for iCalendar files.


Homepage:

https://icalendar.readthedocs.io

Community Discussions:

https://github.com/collective/icalendar/discussions

Issue Tracker:

https://github.com/collective/icalendar/issues

Code:

https://github.com/collective/icalendar

Dependencies:

python-dateutil and tzdata.

License:

BSD


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Quick start guide

icalendar enables you to create, inspect and modify calendaring information with Python.

To install the package, run:

pip install icalendar

Inspect Files

You can open an .ics file and see all the events:

>>> import icalendar
>>> from pathlib import Path
>>> ics_path = Path("src/icalendar/tests/calendars/example.ics")
>>> calendar = icalendar.Calendar.from_ical(ics_path.read_bytes())
>>> for event in calendar.events:
...     print(event.get("SUMMARY"))
New Year's Day
Orthodox Christmas
International Women's Day

Modify Content

Such a calendar can then be edited and saved again.

>>> calendar.calendar_name = "My Modified Calendar"  # modify
>>> print(calendar.to_ical()[:121])  # save modification
BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:collective/icalendar
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
NAME:My Modified Calendar

Create Events, TODOs, Journals, Alarms, …

icalendar supports the creation and parsing of all kinds of objects in the iCalendar (RFC 5545) standard.

>>> icalendar.Event()  # events
VEVENT({})
>>> icalendar.FreeBusy()  # free/busy times
VFREEBUSY({})
>>> icalendar.Todo()  # Todo list entries
VTODO({})
>>> icalendar.Alarm()  # Alarms e.g. for events
VALARM({})
>>> icalendar.Journal()   # Journal entries
VJOURNAL({})

Have a look at more examples.

Use timezones of your choice

With icalendar, you can localize your events to take place in different timezones. zoneinfo, dateutil.tz and pytz are compatible with icalendar. This example creates an event that uses all of the timezone implementations with the same result:

>>> import pytz, zoneinfo, dateutil.tz  # timezone libraries
>>> import datetime, icalendar
>>> e = icalendar.Event()
>>> tz = dateutil.tz.tzstr("Europe/London")
>>> e["X-DT-DATEUTIL"] = icalendar.vDatetime(datetime.datetime(2024, 6, 19, 10, 1, tzinfo=tz))
>>> tz = pytz.timezone("Europe/London")
>>> e["X-DT-USE-PYTZ"] = icalendar.vDatetime(datetime.datetime(2024, 6, 19, 10, 1, tzinfo=tz))
>>> tz = zoneinfo.ZoneInfo("Europe/London")
>>> e["X-DT-ZONEINFO"] = icalendar.vDatetime(datetime.datetime(2024, 6, 19, 10, 1, tzinfo=tz))
>>> print(e.to_ical())  # the libraries yield the same result
BEGIN:VEVENT
X-DT-DATEUTIL;TZID=Europe/London:20240619T100100
X-DT-USE-PYTZ;TZID=Europe/London:20240619T100100
X-DT-ZONEINFO;TZID=Europe/London:20240619T100100
END:VEVENT

Version 6 with zoneinfo

Version 6 of icalendar switches the timezone implementation to zoneinfo. This only affects you if you parse icalendar objects with from_ical(). The functionality is extended and is tested since 6.0.0 with both timezone implementations pytz and zoneinfo.

By default and since 6.0.0, zoneinfo timezones are created.

>>> dt = icalendar.Calendar.example("timezoned").events[0].start
>>> dt.tzinfo
ZoneInfo(key='Europe/Vienna')

If you would like to continue to receive pytz timezones in parse results, you can receive all the latest updates, and switch back to earlier behavior:

>>> icalendar.use_pytz()
>>> dt = icalendar.Calendar.example("timezoned").events[0].start
>>> dt.tzinfo
<DstTzInfo 'Europe/Vienna' CET+1:00:00 STD>

Version 6 is on branch main. It is compatible with Python versions 3.8 - 3.13, and PyPy3. We expect the main branch with versions 6+ to receive the latest updates and features.

Further Reading

You can find out more about this project:

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