I'm writing a Rails application, but can't seem to find how to do relative time, i.e. if given a certain Time class, it can calculate "30 seconds ago" or "2 days ago" or if it's longer than a month "9/1/2008", etc.
11 Answers
Sounds like you're looking for the time_ago_in_words
method (or distance_of_time_in_words
), from ActiveSupport. Call it like this:
<%= time_ago_in_words(timestamp) %>
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4Hints for a ruby newbie on how to run this in irb? I run: require 'active_support' and then try 'time_ago_in_words(Time.now)' but the function isn't found.– cboettigAug 3, 2012 at 0:24
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2@cboettig It's not part of
ActiveSupport
, it's defined inActionView::Helpers::DateHelper
. Aug 5, 2012 at 9:51 -
22you don't need to require 'active_support' if you are in a rails console. there is a console method called
helper
that you can call and access these methods.helper.time_ago_in_words(timestamp)
Oct 3, 2012 at 13:24 -
2Just fyi, if you want this in irb, or plain Ruby, just do a:
require 'active_support/core_ext'
First, and then you're all set for using7.days.ago
and other similar constructs. Feb 15, 2013 at 20:06 -
1great! i've just came here expecting some sample code and found this.I love ruby and rails Apr 4, 2013 at 19:30
I've written this, but have to check the existing methods mentioned to see if they are better.
module PrettyDate
def to_pretty
a = (Time.now-self).to_i
case a
when 0 then 'just now'
when 1 then 'a second ago'
when 2..59 then a.to_s+' seconds ago'
when 60..119 then 'a minute ago' #120 = 2 minutes
when 120..3540 then (a/60).to_i.to_s+' minutes ago'
when 3541..7100 then 'an hour ago' # 3600 = 1 hour
when 7101..82800 then ((a+99)/3600).to_i.to_s+' hours ago'
when 82801..172000 then 'a day ago' # 86400 = 1 day
when 172001..518400 then ((a+800)/(60*60*24)).to_i.to_s+' days ago'
when 518400..1036800 then 'a week ago'
else ((a+180000)/(60*60*24*7)).to_i.to_s+' weeks ago'
end
end
end
Time.send :include, PrettyDate
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1Hum, I read first ruby, and ruby don't have ActiveSupport out of the box. So I think this post is more ruby. However in the actual question there is a mention of rails.– JonkeOct 13, 2008 at 20:05
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Rails is a web framework and the underlying language is ruby. So it is normal to get some ruby code on a rails question. Even if standard ruby does not include ActiveRecord, it is supported with just a "gem install activerecord" command. May 19, 2009 at 11:33
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7You can put the last
return
-line within thecase
statement underelse
, and remove all of thereturn
s.– sawaMar 27, 2011 at 3:50 -
2
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+99 because the end of "an hour ago" ends at 7100, which is 100 seconds short of two hours. Similarly, +800, since 172000 is 800 seconds short of two days (172800 seconds), and so forth.– FredJul 16, 2013 at 4:14
Just to clarify Andrew Marshall's solution for using time_ago_in_words
(For Rails 3.0 and Rails 4.0)
If you are in a view
<%= time_ago_in_words(Date.today - 1) %>
If you are in a controller
include ActionView::Helpers::DateHelper
def index
@sexy_date = time_ago_in_words(Date.today - 1)
end
Controllers do not have the module ActionView::Helpers::DateHelper imported by default.
N.B. It is not "the rails way" to import helpers into your controllers. Helpers are for helping views. The time_ago_in_words method was decided to be a view entity in the MVC triad. (I don't agree but when in rome...)
What about
30.seconds.ago
2.days.ago
Or something else you were shooting for?
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21
You can use the arithmetic operators to do relative time.
Time.now - 2.days
Will give you 2 days ago.
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10
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2
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23
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5this is backwards from what the question was asking. time_ago_in_words is the answer to the question.– xaxxonOct 15, 2011 at 7:00
Something like this would work.
def relative_time(start_time)
diff_seconds = Time.now - start_time
case diff_seconds
when 0 .. 59
puts "#{diff_seconds} seconds ago"
when 60 .. (3600-1)
puts "#{diff_seconds/60} minutes ago"
when 3600 .. (3600*24-1)
puts "#{diff_seconds/3600} hours ago"
when (3600*24) .. (3600*24*30)
puts "#{diff_seconds/(3600*24)} days ago"
else
puts start_time.strftime("%m/%d/%Y")
end
end
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12This is essentially a reimplementation of the distance_of_time_in_words helper: api.rubyonrails.com/classes/ActionView/Helpers/… Oct 12, 2008 at 19:58
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2
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This seems perfectly fine to me. It allows you to customize the rest of the strings. i.e. "3 seconds ago" vs "3s ago"– raidfiveSep 12, 2012 at 3:13
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Since the most answer here suggests time_ago_in_words.
Instead of using :
<%= time_ago_in_words(comment.created_at) %>
In Rails, prefer:
<abbr class="timeago" title="<%= comment.created_at.getutc.iso8601 %>">
<%= comment.created_at.to_s %>
</abbr>
along with a jQuery library http://timeago.yarp.com/, with code:
$("abbr.timeago").timeago();
Main advantage: caching
http://rails-bestpractices.com/posts/2012/02/10/not-use-time_ago_in_words/
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1
Take a look at the instance methods here:
This has useful methods such as yesterday, tomorrow, beginning_of_week, ago, etc.
Examples:
Time.now.yesterday
Time.now.ago(2.days).end_of_day
Time.now.next_month.beginning_of_month
If you're building a Rails application, you should use
Time.zone.now
Time.zone.today
Time.zone.yesterday
This gives you time or date in the timezone with which you've configured your Rails application.
For example, if you configure your application to use UTC, then Time.zone.now
will always be in UTC time (it won't be impacted by the change of British Summertime for example).
Calculating relative time is easy, eg
Time.zone.now - 10.minute
Time.zone.today.days_ago(5)
I've written a gem that does this for Rails ActiveRecord objects. The example uses created_at, but it will also work on updated_at or anything with the class ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone.
Just gem install and call the 'pretty' method on your TimeWithZone instance.
Another approach is to unload some logic from the backend and maek the browser do the job by using Javascript plugins such as: