I was going to suggest that you need not bother with any of the date modules for such a "simple" calculation -- you could merely add
$days*60*60*24 to the seconds since epoch followed by a reverse transformation.
However, in 2002, DST reverts on October 27th, so such a calculation would fail by coming up one hour short.
It is precisely due to such gotchas that the date modules come in handy. I've had good results with Date::Calc (fast but requires a C compiler), Date::Manip (slower, possibly more complete for esoteric dates, no C), and Time::Piece (C compiler).
Matt
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