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Time manipulation in ruby

Tags:

time

ruby

I want to create a DateTime instance that lies 20 minutes and 10 seconds in the future. I tried around with Time and DateTime in irb, but can't seem to figure out a way that really makes sense. I can only add days to DateTime objects and only add seconds to the Time objects.

Isn't there a better way than to always convert the time I want to add into seconds?

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FlyingFoX Avatar asked Apr 07 '12 16:04

FlyingFoX


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How do I convert time in Ruby?

In your code above, simply replace d = DateTime. now with d = DateTime. new(2010,01,01, 10,00,00, Rational(-2, 24)). tt will now show the date d converted into your local timezone.


5 Answers

A Time is a number of seconds since an epoch whereas a DateTime is a number of days since an epoch which is why adding 1 to a DateTime adds a whole day. You can however add fractions of a day, for example

d = DateTime.now
d + Rational(10, 86400)

Will add 10 seconds to d (since there are 86400 seconds in a day).

If you are using Rails, Active Support adds some helper methods and you can do

d + 20.minutes + 10.seconds

Which will do the right thing is d is a DateTime or a Time. You can use Active Support on its own, and these days you can pull in just the bits you need. I seem to recall that this stuff is in activesupport/duration. I believe there are a few other gems that offer help with time handling too.

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Frederick Cheung Avatar answered Oct 21 '22 22:10

Frederick Cheung


Assuming you have required Active Support or you're working in a Rails project. A very simple and readable way to do this in Ruby is:

DateTime + 5.minutes
Time + 5.minutes

Also works with seconds, hours, days, weeks, months, years.

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alex Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 00:10

alex


Just use the Active Support Time extensions. They are very convenient and less error prone than trying to do this by hand. You can import just the module you need:

# gem 'activesupport'
require 'active_support/core_ext/numeric/time.rb'
DateTime.now + 20.minutes

N.B: Yes, this goes against the StackOverflow party line of staying away from 3rd party libraries, but you shouldn't avoid using libraries when they are practically standard, reduce your risk significantly, and provide better code clarity.

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seo Avatar answered Oct 21 '22 22:10

seo


Pure Ruby (no Rails)

class Numeric
  def minutes; self/1440.0 end
  alias :minute :minutes

  def seconds; self/86400.0 end
  alias :second :seconds
end

Where 1440 is the number of minutes and 86400 is the number of seconds in a day. Based on how Rails does.

Then you can just let the magic happen:

d + 20.minutes + 10.seconds

Source: https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/v6.0.3.1/activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/numeric/time.rb

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rodvlopes Avatar answered Oct 21 '22 23:10

rodvlopes


As noted above, you can add seconds to a Time object, so if you call to_time on a DateTime object, you can add seconds to it:

DateTime.strptime("11/19/2019 18:50","%m/%d/%Y %H:%M") + 1 => adds a day

(DateTime.strptime("11/19/2019 18:50","%m/%d/%Y %H:%M").to_time) +1 => adds a second

This doesn't require adding gems.

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wondersz1 Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 00:10

wondersz1