1.2.1 • Published 3 years ago

duration-utils v1.2.1

Weekly downloads
2
License
ISC
Repository
-
Last release
3 years ago
  • Small: Just 2 KB gzipped
  • Fast: Parse complex duration string in milliseconds
  • Flexible: Duration model allows us to work with complex duration easily.
  • Simple: The interface and models are straight forward and easy to use.
  • Intl support: Use your lang for day/hour/minute strings.
  • No dependencies

You can try it on live demo page

Install

npm install duration-utils

Usage

import { useDurationParser, NumericDurationPattern } from "duration-utils";

function DurationInput() {
// First number is a day
const format =  NumericDurationPattern.day;
const [value, setValue] = useState('');

const handleBlur = useCallback((event) => {
  const {
   isValid,
   parsedValue,
   formattedValue,
   rawValue
  } = parse(event.target.value, format);
  
  const nextValue = isValid ? formattedValue : rawValue;
  
  setValue(nextValue);
}, [format, parse]);

return (
 <input
    value={value}
    onBlur={handleBlur}
    onChange={(event) => setValue(event.target.value)}/>
);
}

Duration model

Also you can find a Duration model to handle.

Operation

  • add(first: Duration, second:Duration)
  • subtract(first: Duration, second:Duration)
  • multiply(first: Duration, second:Duration)
  • divide(first: Duration, second:Duration)
  • abs(d: Duration): Duration
  • isNegative(d: Duration): boolean

Converters

  • inDays - number of whole days spanned by this Duration.
  • inHour - number of whole hours spanned by this Duration.
  • inMinutes - number of whole minutes spanned by this Duration.
  • inSeconds - number of whole seconds spanned by this Duration.

Usage

import { Duration } from "duration-utils";

const workDay = new Duration({ hour: 8 });
const overTime = new Duration({ hour: 2, minutes: 30 })

// Converters
console.log(inHours(workDay)) // -> 8
console.log(inMinutes(workDay)) // -> 480, because 8 * 60 = 480
console.log(inSeconds(workDay)) // ->  28800, because 8 * 60 * 60
console.log(inSeconds(workDay)) // ->  28800, because 8 * 60 * 60

// Duration operators
console.log(inMinutes(add(workDay, overTime))) // 630
console.log(toString(add(workDay, overTime))) // 10:30:00.000

Duration parsers works out-of-the-box for most browsers, regardless of version