Delen via


2.2.2.10 CalendarType

The CalendarType element is a child element of the Recurrence element (section 2.2.2.37) that specifies the calendar system used by the recurrence. It is defined as an element in the Calendar namespace.

A command request has a maximum of one CalendarType child element per Recurrence element when the Type element (section 2.2.2.45) value is 2, 3, 5, or 6.

A command response has a minimum of one CalendarType child element per Recurrence element when the Type element value is 2, 3, 5, or 6. Otherwise, this element is optional in command responses.

The value of this element is an unsignedByte data type, as specified in [MS-ASDTYPE] section 2.8.

The value of the CalendarType element MUST be one of the values listed in the following table.

Value

Meaning

0

Default

1

Gregorian

2

Gregorian (United States)

3

Japanese Emperor Era

4

Taiwan

5

Korean Tangun Era

6

Hijri (Arabic Lunar)

7

Thai

8

Hebrew Lunar

9

Gregorian (Middle East French)

10

Gregorian (Arabic)

11

Gregorian (Transliterated English)

12

Gregorian (Transliterated French)

13

Reserved. MUST NOT be used.

14

Japanese Lunar

15

Chinese Lunar

16

Saka Era. Reserved. MUST NOT be used.

17

Chinese Lunar (Eto). Reserved. MUST NOT be used.

18

Korean Lunar (Eto). Reserved. MUST NOT be used.

19

Japanese Rokuyou Lunar. Reserved. MUST NOT be used.

20

Korean Lunar

21

Reserved. MUST NOT be used.

22

Reserved. MUST NOT be used.

23

Um al-Qura. Reserved. MUST NOT be used

The server MAY<1> return a value of 0 (Default) when a client specifies a value of 1 (Gregorian).

Protocol Versions

The following table specifies the protocol versions that support this element. The client indicates the protocol version being used by setting either the MS-ASProtocolVersion header, as specified in [MS-ASHTTP] section 2.2.1.1.2.6, or the Protocol version field, as specified in [MS-ASHTTP] section 2.2.1.1.1.1, in the request.

Protocol version

Element support

2.5

12.0

12.1

14.0

Yes

14.1

Yes

16.0

Yes

16.1

Yes