Michael J. Radwin
Michael J. Radwin
On the hebcal.com website, common strings like Gregorian month names or days of the week are handled by the Day.js library https://day.js.org/docs/en/i18n/i18n The website does not use browser's preferred language...
Understood. Since Aramaic and Syriac are not widely spoken by the worldwide Jewish community it's not a problem that the Gregorian translations of month names and days of week aren't...
The Day.js Javascript library is indeed actively maintained. I see you submitted a PR https://github.com/iamkun/dayjs/pull/1882 back in May but it was never acted on. Perhaps you can follow up with...
This is for the Unix CLI app? Or for the website? iCalendar reminders or email reminders?
Closing this as Hebcal 5 has been rewritten in Golang
Thanks for using Hebcal! Unfortunately we cannot provide an Israeli triennial cycle because we do not have a detailed reference with the aliyot by aliyot breakdown. Hebcal uses [A Complete...
Hi @COH-TorahReaders, have you been able to find a reference for the triennial Torah reading schedule when following the Israel parsha schedule? As far as we know, there are two...
Good luck! I think this definitely requires someone learned in the halacha of Torah Readings to make a decision about where to make the aliyot splits. In particular, Parashat Bechukotai...
Highlighting today's day is possible. Since we use HTTP Expires header to cache the calendar results for up to a month, this would require some javascript (vs. server-side). If you're...
Some investigation today: implementing this requires replacing HTML::CalendarMonthSimple with something else. That code is pretty crufty and not HTML5-compliant, so doing so would also be a good thing. Finding the...