Right now I am working on a timesheet where users can set their in time, their out time, and how long they've been at lunch. Then I use a function that subtracts the in time & the lunch from their out time to figure out their hours, plus possible overtime. What I want is to have javascript set the value of the overtime field to '' (aka null) if the amount of time they were at work is 8 hours or less.
My code for checking overtime is this:
// Return difference between two times in hh:mm[am/pm] format as hh:mm
function checkOvertime(timein, timeout, away) {
// Small helper function to pad single digits
function z(n){return (n<10?'0':'') + n;}
// Get difference in minutes
var subtotal = daytimeStringToMins(timeout) - daytimeStringToMins(timein) - timeStringToMins(away);
var regularhours = '08:00';
if (subtotal > timeStringToMins(regularhours)) {var overtime = daytimeStringToMins(timeout) - daytimeStringToMins(timein) - timeStringToMins(away) - timeStringToMins(regularhours);}
else {var overtime = '0';}
return z(overtime/60 | 0) + ':' + z(overtime % 60);
}
and then in my calculation function I have this:
if (checkOvertime(timein, timeout, away).value == '00:00') {
document.getElementById("date-1-overtime").value = '';
} else {
document.getElementById("date-1-overtime").value = checkOvertime(timein, timeout, away);
}
So if a person is at work for 8 hours, then the "date-1-overtime" field says "00:00" but I would like it to put nothing in there so the sheet prints out more cleanly.
I think maybe I am confusing the difference between strings and integers in the calculation functions but I'm not sure, hopefully someone could help me!
null
and zero, as in0
is not the same thingnull
, you want an empty stringuser - Jhon; Overtime - null
oruser - Jhon; Overtime -
. Even thoughJavaScript
is pretty forgiving and you may end up with a blank space despite returningnull
, using empty string still makes your code more readable (at least in my opinion) and also this may save you some problems later on.