I want to convert a duration of time, i.e., number of seconds to colon-separated time string (hh:mm:ss)
I found some useful answers here but they all talk about converting to x hours and x minutes format.
So is there a tiny snippet that does this in jQuery or just raw JavaScript?
String.prototype.toHHMMSS = function () {
var sec_num = parseInt(this, 10); // don't forget the second param
var hours = Math.floor(sec_num / 3600);
var minutes = Math.floor((sec_num - (hours * 3600)) / 60);
var seconds = sec_num - (hours * 3600) - (minutes * 60);
if (hours < 10) {hours = "0"+hours;}
if (minutes < 10) {minutes = "0"+minutes;}
if (seconds < 10) {seconds = "0"+seconds;}
return hours+':'+minutes+':'+seconds;
}
You can use it now like:
alert("5678".toHHMMSS());
Working snippet:
String.prototype.toHHMMSS = function () {
var sec_num = parseInt(this, 10); // don't forget the second param
var hours = Math.floor(sec_num / 3600);
var minutes = Math.floor((sec_num - (hours * 3600)) / 60);
var seconds = sec_num - (hours * 3600) - (minutes * 60);
if (hours < 10) {hours = "0"+hours;}
if (minutes < 10) {minutes = "0"+minutes;}
if (seconds < 10) {seconds = "0"+seconds;}
return hours + ':' + minutes + ':' + seconds;
}
console.log("5678".toHHMMSS());
You can manage to do this without any external JS library with the help of JS Date method like following:
var date = new Date(0);
date.setSeconds(45); // specify value for SECONDS here
var timeString = date.toISOString().substr(11, 8);
console.log(timeString)
To get the time part in the format hh:MM:ss
, you can use this regular expression:
(This was mentioned above in same post by someone, thanks for that.)
var myDate = new Date().toTimeString().replace(/.*(\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}).*/, "$1");
console.log(myDate)
I recommend ordinary javascript, using the Date object:
var seconds = 9999;
// multiply by 1000 because Date() requires miliseconds
var date = new Date(seconds * 1000);
var hh = date.getUTCHours();
var mm = date.getUTCMinutes();
var ss = date.getSeconds();
// If you were building a timestamp instead of a duration, you would uncomment the following line to get 12-hour (not 24) time
// if (hh > 12) {hh = hh % 12;}
// These lines ensure you have two-digits
if (hh < 10) {hh = "0"+hh;}
if (mm < 10) {mm = "0"+mm;}
if (ss < 10) {ss = "0"+ss;}
// This formats your string to HH:MM:SS
var t = hh+":"+mm+":"+ss;
document.write(t);
(Of course, the Date object created will have an actual date associated with it, but that data is extraneous, so for these purposes, you don't have to worry about it.)
A Google search turned up this result:
function secondsToTime(secs)
{
secs = Math.round(secs);
var hours = Math.floor(secs / (60 * 60));
var divisor_for_minutes = secs % (60 * 60);
var minutes = Math.floor(divisor_for_minutes / 60);
var divisor_for_seconds = divisor_for_minutes % 60;
var seconds = Math.ceil(divisor_for_seconds);
var obj = {
"h": hours,
"m": minutes,
"s": seconds
};
return obj;
}
Variation on a theme. Handles single digit seconds a little differently
seconds2time(0) -> "0s"
seconds2time(59) -> "59s"
seconds2time(60) -> "1:00"
seconds2time(1000) -> "16:40"
seconds2time(4000) -> "1:06:40"
function seconds2time (seconds) {
var hours = Math.floor(seconds / 3600);
var minutes = Math.floor((seconds - (hours * 3600)) / 60);
var seconds = seconds - (hours * 3600) - (minutes * 60);
var time = "";
if (hours != 0) {
time = hours+":";
}
if (minutes != 0 || time !== "") {
minutes = (minutes < 10 && time !== "") ? "0"+minutes : String(minutes);
time += minutes+":";
}
if (time === "") {
time = seconds+"s";
}
else {
time += (seconds < 10) ? "0"+seconds : String(seconds);
}
return time;
}
Here's my take on it:
function formatTime(seconds) {
const h = Math.floor(seconds / 3600);
const m = Math.floor((seconds % 3600) / 60);
const s = seconds % 60;
return [
h,
m > 9 ? m : (h ? '0' + m : m || '0'),
s > 9 ? s : '0' + s
].filter(Boolean).join(':');
}
Expected results:
expect(formatTime(0)).toEqual('0:00');
expect(formatTime(1)).toEqual('0:01');
expect(formatTime(599)).toEqual('9:59');
expect(formatTime(600)).toEqual('10:00');
expect(formatTime(3600)).toEqual('1:00:00');
expect(formatTime(360009)).toEqual('100:00:09');
I like the first answer. There some optimisations:
source data is a Number. additional calculations is not needed.
much excess computing
Result code:
Number.prototype.toHHMMSS = function () {
var seconds = Math.floor(this),
hours = Math.floor(seconds / 3600);
seconds -= hours*3600;
var minutes = Math.floor(seconds / 60);
seconds -= minutes*60;
if (hours < 10) {hours = "0"+hours;}
if (minutes < 10) {minutes = "0"+minutes;}
if (seconds < 10) {seconds = "0"+seconds;}
return hours+':'+minutes+':'+seconds;
}
Using the amazing moment.js library:
function humanizeDuration(input, units ) {
// units is a string with possible values of y, M, w, d, h, m, s, ms
var duration = moment().startOf('day').add(units, input),
format = "";
if(duration.hour() > 0){ format += "H [hours] "; }
if(duration.minute() > 0){ format += "m [minutes] "; }
format += " s [seconds]";
return duration.format(format);
}
This allows you to specify any duration be it hours, minutes, seconds, mills, and returns a human readable version.
function formatTime(seconds) {
return [
parseInt(seconds / 60 / 60),
parseInt(seconds / 60 % 60),
parseInt(seconds % 60)
]
.join(":")
.replace(/\b(\d)\b/g, "0$1")
}
new Date().toString().split(" ")[4];
result 15:08:03
It's pretty easy,
function toTimeString(seconds) {
return (new Date(seconds * 1000)).toUTCString().match(/(\d\d:\d\d:\d\d)/)[0];
}
s2t=function (t){
return parseInt(t/86400)+'d '+(new Date(t%86400*1000)).toUTCString().replace(/.*(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2}).*/, "$1h $2m $3s");
}
s2t(123456);
result:
1d 10h 17m 36s
I liked Webjins answer the most, so i extended it to display days with a d suffix, made display conditional and included a s suffix on plain seconds:
function sec2str(t){
var d = Math.floor(t/86400),
h = ('0'+Math.floor(t/3600) % 24).slice(-2),
m = ('0'+Math.floor(t/60)%60).slice(-2),
s = ('0' + t % 60).slice(-2);
return (d>0?d+'d ':'')+(h>0?h+':':'')+(m>0?m+':':'')+(t>60?s:s+'s');
}
returns "3d 16:32:12" or "16:32:12" or "32:12" or "12s"
I loved Powtac's answer, but I wanted to use it in angular.js, so I created a filter using his code.
.filter('HHMMSS', ['$filter', function ($filter) {
return function (input, decimals) {
var sec_num = parseInt(input, 10),
decimal = parseFloat(input) - sec_num,
hours = Math.floor(sec_num / 3600),
minutes = Math.floor((sec_num - (hours * 3600)) / 60),
seconds = sec_num - (hours * 3600) - (minutes * 60);
if (hours < 10) {hours = "0"+hours;}
if (minutes < 10) {minutes = "0"+minutes;}
if (seconds < 10) {seconds = "0"+seconds;}
var time = hours+':'+minutes+':'+seconds;
if (decimals > 0) {
time += '.' + $filter('number')(decimal, decimals).substr(2);
}
return time;
};
}])
It's functionally identical, except that I added in an optional decimals field to display fractional seconds. Use it like you would any other filter:
{{ elapsedTime | HHMMSS }}
displays: 01:23:45
{{ elapsedTime | HHMMSS : 3 }}
displays: 01:23:45.678
I think performance wise this is by far the fastest:
var t = 34236; // your seconds
var time = ('0'+Math.floor(t/3600) % 24).slice(-2)+':'+('0'+Math.floor(t/60)%60).slice(-2)+':'+('0' + t % 60).slice(-2)
//would output: 09:30:36
function toHHMMSS(seconds) {
var h, m, s, result='';
// HOURs
h = Math.floor(seconds/3600);
seconds -= h*3600;
if(h){
result = h<10 ? '0'+h+':' : h+':';
}
// MINUTEs
m = Math.floor(seconds/60);
seconds -= m*60;
result += m<10 ? '0'+m+':' : m+':';
// SECONDs
s=seconds%60;
result += s<10 ? '0'+s : s;
return result;
}
Examples
toHHMMSS(111); "01:51" toHHMMSS(4444); "01:14:04" toHHMMSS(33); "00:33"
Here is yet another version, which handles days also:
function FormatSecondsAsDurationString( seconds )
{
var s = "";
var days = Math.floor( ( seconds / 3600 ) / 24 );
if ( days >= 1 )
{
s += days.toString() + " day" + ( ( days == 1 ) ? "" : "s" ) + " + ";
seconds -= days * 24 * 3600;
}
var hours = Math.floor( seconds / 3600 );
s += GetPaddedIntString( hours.toString(), 2 ) + ":";
seconds -= hours * 3600;
var minutes = Math.floor( seconds / 60 );
s += GetPaddedIntString( minutes.toString(), 2 ) + ":";
seconds -= minutes * 60;
s += GetPaddedIntString( Math.floor( seconds ).toString(), 2 );
return s;
}
function GetPaddedIntString( n, numDigits )
{
var nPadded = n;
for ( ; nPadded.length < numDigits ; )
{
nPadded = "0" + nPadded;
}
return nPadded;
}
A regular expression can be used to match the time substring in the string returned from the toString()
method of the Date object, which is formatted as follows: "Thu Jul 05 2012 02:45:12 GMT+0100 (GMT Daylight Time)". Note that this solution uses the time since the epoch: midnight of January 1, 1970. This solution can be a one-liner, though splitting it up makes it much easier to understand.
function secondsToTime(seconds) {
const start = new Date(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0).getTime();
const end = new Date(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, parseInt(seconds), 0).getTime();
const duration = end - start;
return new Date(duration).toString().replace(/.*(\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}).*/, "$1");
}
Here's how I did it. It seems to work fairly well, and it's extremely compact. (It uses a lot of ternary operators, though)
function formatTime(seconds) {
var hh = Math.floor(seconds / 3600),
mm = Math.floor(seconds / 60) % 60,
ss = Math.floor(seconds) % 60;
return (hh ? (hh < 10 ? "0" : "") + hh + ":" : "") + ((mm < 10) && hh ? "0" : "") + mm + ":" + (ss < 10 ? "0" : "") + ss
}
...and for formatting strings...
String.prototype.toHHMMSS = function() {
formatTime(parseInt(this, 10))
};
You can use the following function to convert time (in seconds) to HH:MM:SS
format :
var convertTime = function (input, separator) {
var pad = function(input) {return input < 10 ? "0" + input : input;};
return [
pad(Math.floor(input / 3600)),
pad(Math.floor(input % 3600 / 60)),
pad(Math.floor(input % 60)),
].join(typeof separator !== 'undefined' ? separator : ':' );
}
Without passing a separator, it uses :
as the (default) separator :
time = convertTime(13551.9941351); // --> OUTPUT = 03:45:51
If you want to use -
as a separator, just pass it as the second parameter:
time = convertTime(1126.5135155, '-'); // --> OUTPUT = 00-18-46
var convertTime = function (input, separator) {
var pad = function(input) {return input < 10 ? "0" + input : input;};
return [
pad(Math.floor(input / 3600)),
pad(Math.floor(input % 3600 / 60)),
pad(Math.floor(input % 60)),
].join(typeof separator !== 'undefined' ? separator : ':' );
}
document.body.innerHTML = '<pre>' + JSON.stringify({
5.3515555 : convertTime(5.3515555),
126.2344452 : convertTime(126.2344452, '-'),
1156.1535548 : convertTime(1156.1535548, '.'),
9178.1351559 : convertTime(9178.1351559, ':'),
13555.3515135 : convertTime(13555.3515135, ',')
}, null, '\t') + '</pre>';
See also this Fiddle.
There's a new method for strings on the block: padStart
const str = '5';
str.padStart(2, '0'); // 05
Here is a sample use case: YouTube durations in 4 lines of JavaScript
This is how i did it
function timeFromSecs(seconds)
{
return(
Math.floor(seconds/86400)+'d :'+
Math.floor(((seconds/86400)%1)*24)+'h : '+
Math.floor(((seconds/3600)%1)*60)+'m : '+
Math.round(((seconds/60)%1)*60)+'s');
}
timeFromSecs(22341938) will return '258d 14h 5m 38s'
I'm personally prefer the leading unit (days, hours, minutes) without leading zeros. But seconds should always be leaded by minutes (0:13), this presentation is easily considered as 'duration', without further explanation (marking as min, sec(s), etc.), usable in various languages (internationalization).
// returns (-)d.h:mm:ss(.f)
// (-)h:mm:ss(.f)
// (-)m:ss(.f)
function formatSeconds (value, fracDigits) {
var isNegative = false;
if (isNaN(value)) {
return value;
} else if (value < 0) {
isNegative = true;
value = Math.abs(value);
}
var days = Math.floor(value / 86400);
value %= 86400;
var hours = Math.floor(value / 3600);
value %= 3600;
var minutes = Math.floor(value / 60);
var seconds = (value % 60).toFixed(fracDigits || 0);
if (seconds < 10) {
seconds = '0' + seconds;
}
var res = hours ? (hours + ':' + ('0' + minutes).slice(-2) + ':' + seconds) : (minutes + ':' + seconds);
if (days) {
res = days + '.' + res;
}
return (isNegative ? ('-' + res) : res);
}
//imitating the server side (.net, C#) duration formatting like:
public static string Format(this TimeSpan interval)
{
string pattern;
if (interval.Days > 0) pattern = @"d\.h\:mm\:ss";
else if (interval.Hours > 0) pattern = @"h\:mm\:ss";
else pattern = @"m\:ss";
return string.Format("{0}", interval.ToString(pattern));
}
You can use Momement.js with moment-duration-format plugin:
var seconds = 3820;
var duration = moment.duration(seconds, 'seconds');
var formatted = duration.format("hh:mm:ss");
console.log(formatted); // 01:03:40
<!-- Moment.js library -->
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.18.1/moment.min.js"></script>
<!-- moment-duration-format plugin -->
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment-duration-format/1.3.0/moment-duration-format.min.js"></script>
See also this Fiddle
secToHHMM(number: number) {
debugger;
let hours = Math.floor(number / 3600);
let minutes = Math.floor((number - (hours * 3600)) / 60);
let seconds = number - (hours * 3600) - (minutes * 60);
let H, M, S;
if (hours < 10) H = ("0" + hours);
if (minutes < 10) M = ("0" + minutes);
if (seconds < 10) S = ("0" + seconds);
return (H || hours) + ':' + (M || minutes) + ':' + (S || seconds);
}
Here's a one-liner updated for 2019:
//your date
var someDate = new Date("Wed Jun 26 2019 09:38:02 GMT+0100")
var result = `${String(someDate.getHours()).padStart(2,"0")}:${String(someDate.getMinutes()).padStart(2,"0")}:${String(someDate.getSeconds()).padStart(2,"0")}`
//result will be "09:38:02"
I'd upvote artem's answer, but I am a new poster. I did expand on his solution, though not what the OP asked for as follows
t=(new Date()).toString().split(" ");
timestring = (t[2]+t[1]+' <b>'+t[4]+'</b> '+t[6][1]+t[7][0]+t[8][0]);
To get
04Oct 16:31:28 PDT
This works for me...
But if you are starting with just a time quantity, I use two functions; one to format and pad, and one to calculate:
function sec2hms(timect){
if(timect=== undefined||timect==0||timect === null){return ''};
//timect is seconds, NOT milliseconds
var se=timect % 60; //the remainder after div by 60
timect = Math.floor(timect/60);
var mi=timect % 60; //the remainder after div by 60
timect = Math.floor(timect/60);
var hr = timect % 24; //the remainder after div by 24
var dy = Math.floor(timect/24);
return padify (se, mi, hr, dy);
}
function padify (se, mi, hr, dy){
hr = hr<10?"0"+hr:hr;
mi = mi<10?"0"+mi:mi;
se = se<10?"0"+se:se;
dy = dy>0?dy+"d ":"";
return dy+hr+":"+mi+":"+se;
}
If you know the number of seconds you have, this will work. It also uses the native Date() object.
function formattime(numberofseconds){
var zero = '0', hours, minutes, seconds, time;
time = new Date(0, 0, 0, 0, 0, numberofseconds, 0);
hh = time.getHours();
mm = time.getMinutes();
ss = time.getSeconds()
// Pad zero values to 00
hh = (zero+hh).slice(-2);
mm = (zero+mm).slice(-2);
ss = (zero+ss).slice(-2);
time = hh + ':' + mm + ':' + ss;
return time;
}
Non-prototype version of toHHMMSS:
function toHHMMSS(seconds) {
var sec_num = parseInt(seconds);
var hours = Math.floor(sec_num / 3600);
var minutes = Math.floor((sec_num - (hours * 3600)) / 60);
var seconds = sec_num - (hours * 3600) - (minutes * 60);
if (hours < 10) {hours = "0"+hours;}
if (minutes < 10) {minutes = "0"+minutes;}
if (seconds < 10) {seconds = "0"+seconds;}
var time = hours+':'+minutes+':'+seconds;
return time;
}
Here is a fairly simple solution that rounds to the nearest second!
var returnElapsedTime = function(epoch) {
//We are assuming that the epoch is in seconds
var hours = epoch / 3600,
minutes = (hours % 1) * 60,
seconds = (minutes % 1) * 60;
return Math.floor(hours) + ":" + Math.floor(minutes) + ":" + Math.round(seconds);
}
This is one I wrote recently for MM:SS. It's not exact to the question, but it's a different one-liner format.
const time = 60 * 2 + 35; // 2 minutes, 35 seconds
const str = (~~(time / 60) + "").padStart(2, '0') + ":" + (~~((time / 60) % 1 * 60) + "").padStart(2, '0');
str // 02:35
Edit: This was added for variety, but the best solution here is https://stackoverflow.com/a/25279399/639679 below.
const secondsToTime = (seconds, locale) => {
const date = new Date(0);
date.setHours(0, 0, seconds, 0);
return date.toLocaleTimeString(locale);
}
console.log(secondsToTime(3610, "en"));
where the locale parameter ("en", "de", etc.) is optional
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