404

How can I convert seconds to an HH-MM-SS string using JavaScript?

1

37 Answers 37

574

You can manage to do this without any external JavaScript library with the help of JavaScript Date method like following:

const date = new Date(null);
date.setSeconds(SECONDS); // specify value for SECONDS here
const result = date.toISOString().slice(11, 19);

Or, as per @Frank's comment; a one liner:

new Date(SECONDS * 1000).toISOString().slice(11, 19);
14
  • 47
    I don't know why everyone is adding extra libraries or doing the math manually when this works perfectly. Thanks!
    – jminardi
    Apr 13, 2015 at 23:42
  • 158
    This can even be shortened to one line: new Date(SECONDS * 1000).toISOString().substr(11, 8);
    – Frank
    Jan 13, 2016 at 20:17
  • 79
    The problem with this approach is that it will overflow after 24 hours, preventing you from showing more than this length of time. Perfect solution if you have less than 24 hours in seconds. Feb 12, 2017 at 13:18
  • 2
    This does not work for me in IE11, I get Object doesn't support property or method 'toISOString'
    – NibblyPig
    Feb 22, 2017 at 16:58
  • 1
    This needs example input & example output.
    – Andrew
    Jul 1, 2018 at 13:56
378

Updated (2020):

Please use @Frank's one line solution:

new Date(SECONDS * 1000).toISOString().substring(11, 16)

If SECONDS<3600 and if you want to show only MM:SS then use below code:

new Date(SECONDS * 1000).toISOString().substring(14, 19)

It is by far the best solution.


Old answer:

Use the Moment.js library.

12
  • 27
    Granted Moment.js isn't all that big but if all you're doing with it is to convert seconds to hh:mm:ss, it seems like a bit of overkill. Rather use one of the functions suggested in these or other answers. Sep 20, 2013 at 6:37
  • 7
    This answer is, if anything, partially wrong. What happens if the amount exceeds 86400 seconds? ;) Jun 16, 2014 at 21:13
  • 5
    I think the other solution is better than throwing another js library in the mix. Jul 18, 2016 at 16:55
  • 5
    Adding library for one simple action i think shouldn't be accepted answer. Yes, this works, but there is better solutions!!!
    – Andris
    Jul 22, 2019 at 10:40
  • 4
    Using this library for one minor task like this adds 59,024 bytes to your project for the same effect that about 53 bytes will give you. . . From below: new Date(SECONDS * 1000).toISOString().substr(11, 8);
    – ashleedawg
    May 16, 2020 at 2:11
216

I don't think any built-in feature of the standard Date object will do this for you in a way that's more convenient than just doing the math yourself.

hours = Math.floor(totalSeconds / 3600);
totalSeconds %= 3600;
minutes = Math.floor(totalSeconds / 60);
seconds = totalSeconds % 60;

Example:

let totalSeconds = 28565;
let hours = Math.floor(totalSeconds / 3600);
totalSeconds %= 3600;
let minutes = Math.floor(totalSeconds / 60);
let seconds = totalSeconds % 60;

console.log("hours: " + hours);
console.log("minutes: " + minutes);
console.log("seconds: " + seconds);

// If you want strings with leading zeroes:
minutes = String(minutes).padStart(2, "0");
hours = String(hours).padStart(2, "0");
seconds = String(seconds).padStart(2, "0");
console.log(hours + ":" + minutes + ":" + seconds);

4
  • This is the most correct answer because it doesn't overflow if more than 24 hours. Oct 19, 2020 at 6:00
  • Edge case perhaps, yet something to be aware of: suppose a value such as totalSeconds = 1739.8395. (T.J. mentions fractional portions in comment above.) Formula computes "seconds" as 59.839500000000044. If a person wants to round up, then 59 seconds becomes 60 seconds. Meaning, "seconds" value needs to be set to 0, and 1 minute needs to be added to "minutes". And if "minutes" value happened to be 59, "minutes" value becomes 60, and so "minutes" needs to be reset to 0, and 1 hour needs to be added to "hours".
    – mg1075
    Oct 16, 2022 at 4:03
  • @mg1075 - The simplest solution there would be to start out with totalSeconds = Math.round(totalSeconds);. :-) Oct 16, 2022 at 7:47
  • related: stackoverflow.com/q/4228356
    – djvg
    Jul 4, 2023 at 11:14
138

I know this is kinda old, but...

ES2015:

var toHHMMSS = (secs) => {
    var sec_num = parseInt(secs, 10)
    var hours   = Math.floor(sec_num / 3600)
    var minutes = Math.floor(sec_num / 60) % 60
    var seconds = sec_num % 60

    return [hours,minutes,seconds]
        .map(v => v < 10 ? "0" + v : v)
        .filter((v,i) => v !== "00" || i > 0)
        .join(":")
}

It will output:

toHHMMSS(129600) // 36:00:00
toHHMMSS(13545) // 03:45:45
toHHMMSS(180) // 03:00
toHHMMSS(18) // 00:18
1
  • 2
    What about fractions of a second? 03:45:45.xxx? Jun 16, 2017 at 18:54
44

As Cleiton pointed out in his answer, moment.js can be used for this:

moment().startOf('day')
        .seconds(15457)
        .format('H:mm:ss');
5
  • 9
    What happens if the number of seconds exceeds a day? Dec 27, 2015 at 12:21
  • 3
    @GiladPeleg if the number of seconds exceeds a day, number of days is calculated internally and it will only return the remaining hours, minutes and seconds. If you want to count number of days as well, you can try moment().startOf('year').seconds(30000000).format('DDD HH:mm:ss').
    – elquimista
    Mar 4, 2016 at 18:12
  • 10
    What happens if the number of seconds exceeds a year?
    – OrangePot
    May 9, 2017 at 21:47
  • 4
    @OrangePot if the number of seconds exceeds a year, number of years is calculated internally and it will only return the remaining days, hours, minutes and seconds. If you want to count number of years as well, you can try .format('YYYY DDD HH:mm:ss') Aug 25, 2017 at 21:46
  • 1
    But this cannot be made optional. That might look ugly.
    – shaedrich
    May 25, 2018 at 23:02
26

Here's a simple function for converting times that might help

function formatSeconds(seconds) {
    var date = new Date(1970,0,1);
    date.setSeconds(seconds);
    return date.toTimeString().replace(/.*(\d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2}).*/, "$1");
}
2
  • 2
    formatSeconds(3919); //Returns 01:05:19 Excellent Function .. Like it Apr 1, 2014 at 7:25
  • Like said before, this will overflow after 24 hours
    – PaulCrp
    Dec 3, 2021 at 0:43
19

This does the trick:

function secondstotime(secs)
{
    var t = new Date(1970,0,1);
    t.setSeconds(secs);
    var s = t.toTimeString().substr(0,8);
    if(secs > 86399)
        s = Math.floor((t - Date.parse("1/1/70")) / 3600000) + s.substr(2);
    return s;
}

(Sourced from here)

15
var  timeInSec = "661"; //even it can be string

String.prototype.toHHMMSS = function () { 
   /* extend the String by using prototypical inheritance */
    var seconds = parseInt(this, 10); // don't forget the second param
    var hours   = Math.floor(seconds / 3600);
    var minutes = Math.floor((seconds - (hours * 3600)) / 60);
    seconds = seconds - (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;
}

alert("5678".toHHMMSS());   // "01:34:38"
console.log(timeInSec.toHHMMSS());   //"00:11:01"

we can make this function lot shorter and crisp but that decreases the readability, so we will write it as simple as possible and as stable as possible.

or you can check this working here:

2
  • moreover ... if u want to do all date time thing easily.. use momentJS
    – Sheelpriy
    Aug 13, 2015 at 7:45
  • Thanks! no need to include a Library in a browser extension. Simple and works!
    – Arlo
    Aug 27, 2018 at 19:08
12

I think the most general (and cryptic) solution could be this

function hms(seconds) {
  return [3600, 60]
    .reduceRight(
      (pipeline, breakpoint) => remainder =>
        [Math.floor(remainder / breakpoint)].concat(pipeline(remainder % breakpoint)),
      r => [r]
    )(seconds)
    .map(amount => amount.toString().padStart(2, '0'))
    .join('-');
}

Or to copy & paste the shortest version

function hms(seconds) {
  return [3600, 60]
    .reduceRight(
      (p, b) => r => [Math.floor(r / b)].concat(p(r % b)),
      r => [r]
    )(seconds)
    .map(a => a.toString().padStart(2, '0'))
    .join('-');
}

Some example outputs:

> hms(0)
< "00-00-00"

> hms(5)
< "00-00-05"

> hms(60)
< "00-01-00"

> hms(3785)
< "01-03-05"

> hms(37850)
< "10-30-50"

> hms(378500)
< "105-08-20"

How it works

Algorithm

  1. To get hours you divide total seconds by 3600 and floor it.
  2. To get minutes you divide remainder by 60 and floor it.
  3. To get seconds you just use the remainder.

It would also be nice to keep individual amounts in an array for easier formatting.

For example given the input of 3785s the output should be [1, 3, 5], that is 1 hour, 3 minutes and 5 seconds.

Creating pipeline

Naming the 3600 and 60 constants "breakpoints" you can write this algorithm into function as this

function divideAndAppend(remainder, breakpoint, callback) {
  return [Math.floor(remainder / breakpoint)].concat(callback(remainder % breakpoint));
}

It returns an array where first item is the amount for given breakpoint and the rest of the array is given by the callback. Reusing the divideAndAppend in callback function will give you a pipeline of composed divideAndAppend functions. Each one of these computes amount per given breakpoint and append it to the array making your desired output.

Then you also need the "final" callback that ends this pipeline. In another words you used all breakpoints and now you have only the remainder. Since you have already the answer at 3) you should use some sort of identity function, in this case remainder => [remainder].

You can now write the pipeline like this

let pipeline = r3 => divideAndAppend(
    r3, 
    3600, 
    r2 => divideAndAppend(
        r2, 
        60, 
        r1 => [r1]));

> pipeline(3785)
< [1, 3, 5]

Cool right?

Generalizing using for-loop

Now you can generalize with a variable amount of breakpoints and create a for-loop that will compose individial divideAndAppend functions into the pipeline. You start with the identity function r1 => [r1], then use the 60 breakpoint and finally use the 3600 breakpoint.

let breakpoints = [60, 3600];
let pipeline = r => [r];

for (const b of breakpoints) {
  const previousPipeline = pipeline;
  pipeline = r => divideAndAppend(r, b, previousPipeline);
}

> pipeline(3785)
< [1, 3, 5]

Using Array.prototype.reduce()

Now you can rewrite this for-loop into reducer for shorter and more functional code. In other words rewrite function composition into the reducer.

let pipeline = [60, 3600].reduce(
  (ppln, b) => r => divideAndAppend(r, b, ppln),
  r => [r]
);

> pipeline(3785)
< [1, 3, 5]

The accumulator ppln is the pipeline and you are composing it using the previous version of it. The initial pipeline is r => [r].

You can now inline the function divideAndAppend and use Array.prototype.reduceRight which is the same as [].reverse().reduce(...) to make the breakpoints definitions more natural.

let pipeline = [3600, 60]
    .reduceRight(
      (ppln, b) => r => [Math.floor(r / b)].concat(ppln(r % b)),
      r => [r]
    );

Which is the final form. Then you just appy mapping to string with padded 0's on left and join the strings with : separator;

More generalizations

Wrapping the reducer into function

function decompose(total, breakpoints) {
  return breakpoints.reduceRight(
    (p, b) => r => [Math.floor(r / b)].concat(p(r % b)),
    r => [r]
  )(total);
}

> decompose(3785, [3600, 60])
< [1, 3, 5]

you now have very general algorithm you can work with. For example:

Convert easily (the weird) us length standards

Given the standards

Unit Divisions
1 foot 12 inches
1 yard 3 feet
1 mile 1760 yards
> decompose(123_456, [1760 * 3 * 12, 3 * 12, 12])
< [1, 1669, 1, 0]

123456 in = 1 mi, 1669 yd, 1 feet and 0 in

Or you can somewhat convert to decimal or binary representations

> decompose(123_456, [100_000, 10_000, 1000, 100, 10])
< [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]

> decompose(127, [128, 64, 32, 16, 8, 4, 2])
< [0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1]

Works also with floating point breakpoints

Since Javascript supports mod operator with floating point numbers, you can also do

> decompose(26.5, [20, 2.5])
< [1, 2, 1.5]

The edge case of no breakpoints is also naturally covered

> decompose(123, [])
< [123]
0
10

Try this:

function toTimeString(seconds) {
  return (new Date(seconds * 1000)).toUTCString().match(/(\d\d:\d\d:\d\d)/)[0];
}
9

Here is an extension to Number class. toHHMMSS() converts seconds to an hh:mm:ss string.

Number.prototype.toHHMMSS = function() {
  var hours = Math.floor(this / 3600) < 10 ? ("00" + Math.floor(this / 3600)).slice(-2) : Math.floor(this / 3600);
  var minutes = ("00" + Math.floor((this % 3600) / 60)).slice(-2);
  var seconds = ("00" + (this % 3600) % 60).slice(-2);
  return hours + ":" + minutes + ":" + seconds;
}

// Usage: [number variable].toHHMMSS();

// Here is a simple test
var totalseconds = 1234;
document.getElementById("timespan").innerHTML = totalseconds.toHHMMSS();
// HTML of the test
<div id="timespan"></div>

0
5

Easy to follow version for noobies:

 var totalNumberOfSeconds = YOURNUMBEROFSECONDS;
 var hours = parseInt( totalNumberOfSeconds / 3600 );
 var minutes = parseInt( (totalNumberOfSeconds - (hours * 3600)) / 60 );
 var seconds = Math.floor((totalNumberOfSeconds - ((hours * 3600) + (minutes * 60))));
 var result = (hours < 10 ? "0" + hours : hours) + ":" + (minutes < 10 ? "0" + minutes : minutes) + ":" + (seconds  < 10 ? "0" + seconds : seconds);
 console.log(result);
5

This function should do it :

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

See also this Fiddle.

2
  • Could use default parameters like (input ,separator=":"). Also it didn't return anything until I modified it a bit paste.ee/p/FDNag
    – madprops
    Mar 24, 2018 at 19:28
  • @madprops : Actually, the version in my answer already sets : as default for the separator parameter, as I already explained. This is done by the statement typeof separator !== 'undefined' ? separator : ':'. Also, your function is pretty much identical to mine save some cosmetic changes and they should both produce the same output... except my version has much better browser support. Yours won't work in ANY version of Internet Explorer or MS Edge < 14. Jul 17, 2019 at 21:48
5

Chiming in on this old thread -- the OP stated HH:MM:SS, and many of the solutions work, until you realize you need more than 24 hours listed. And maybe you don't want more than a single line of code. Here you go:

d=(s)=>{f=Math.floor;g=(n)=>('00'+n).slice(-2);return f(s/3600)+':'+g(f(s/60)%60)+':'+g(s%60)}

It returns H+:MM:SS. To use it, simply use:

d(91260);     // returns "25:21:00"
d(960);       // returns "0:16:00"

...I tried to get it to use the least amount of code possible, for a nice one-liner approach.

1
  • 1
    Can you provide an expanded/reading version of your code as well so we can more easily see what is happening? Thanks.
    – Kimball
    Jun 30, 2017 at 2:30
5

For the special case of HH:MM:SS.MS (eq: "00:04:33.637") as used by FFMPEG to specify milliseconds.

[-][HH:]MM:SS[.m...]

HH expresses the number of hours, MM the number of minutes for a maximum of 2 digits, and SS the number of seconds for a maximum of 2 digits. The m at the end expresses decimal value for SS.

/* HH:MM:SS.MS to (FLOAT)seconds ---------------*/
function timerToSec(timer){
   let vtimer = timer.split(":")
   let vhours = +vtimer[0]
   let vminutes = +vtimer[1]
   let vseconds = parseFloat(vtimer[2])
   return vhours * 3600 + vminutes * 60 + vseconds
}

/* Seconds to (STRING)HH:MM:SS.MS --------------*/
function secToTimer(sec){
  let o = new Date(0)
  let p =  new Date(sec*1000)  
  return new Date(p.getTime()-o.getTime())
    .toISOString()
    .split("T")[1]
    .split("Z")[0]
}

/* Example: 7hours, 4 minutes, 33 seconds and 637 milliseconds */
const t = "07:04:33.637"
console.log(
  t + " => " +
  timerToSec(t) +
  "s"
)

/* Test: 25473 seconds and 637 milliseconds */
const s = 25473.637 // "25473.637"
console.log(
  s + "s => " + 
  secToTimer(s)
)

Example usage, a milliseconds transport timer:

/* Seconds to (STRING)HH:MM:SS.MS --------------*/
function secToTimer(sec){
  let o = new Date(0)
  let p =  new Date(sec*1000)  
  return new Date(p.getTime()-o.getTime())
    .toISOString()
    .split("T")[1]
    .split("Z")[0]
}

let job, origin = new Date().getTime()
const timer = () => {
  job = requestAnimationFrame(timer)
  OUT.textContent = secToTimer((new Date().getTime() - origin) / 1000)
}

requestAnimationFrame(timer)
span {font-size:4rem}
<span id="OUT"></span>
<br>
<button onclick="origin = new Date().getTime()">RESET</button>
<button onclick="requestAnimationFrame(timer)">RESTART</button>
<button onclick="cancelAnimationFrame(job)">STOP</button>

Example usage, binded to a media element

/* Seconds to (STRING)HH:MM:SS.MS --------------*/
function secToTimer(sec){
  let o = new Date(0)
  let p =  new Date(sec*1000)  
  return new Date(p.getTime()-o.getTime())
    .toISOString()
    .split("T")[1]
    .split("Z")[0]
}

VIDEO.addEventListener("timeupdate", function(e){
  OUT.textContent = secToTimer(e.target.currentTime)
}, false)
span {font-size:4rem}
<span id="OUT"></span><br>
<video id="VIDEO" width="400" controls autoplay>
  <source src="https://www.w3schools.com/html/mov_bbb.mp4" type="video/mp4">
</video>


Outside the question, those functions written in php:

<?php 
/* HH:MM:SS to (FLOAT)seconds ------------------*/
function timerToSec($timer){
  $vtimer = explode(":",$timer);
  $vhours = (int)$vtimer[0];
  $vminutes = (int)$vtimer[1];
  $vseconds = (float)$vtimer[2];
  return $vhours * 3600 + $vminutes * 60 + $vseconds;
}
/* Seconds to (STRING)HH:MM:SS -----------------*/
function secToTimer($sec){
  return explode(" ", date("H:i:s", $sec))[0];  
}
2
  • 1
    You can omit + "." + p.getMilliseconds() by just using new Date(p.getTime()-o.getTime()).toISOString().split("T")[1].split("Z")[0]
    – Yuna
    Feb 27, 2020 at 22:27
  • 1
    Looks alright, yes your version it faster: See benchmark jsben.ch/4sQY1 Accepted edit! Thank you.
    – NVRM
    Feb 27, 2020 at 22:50
4

After looking at all the answers and not being happy with most of them, this is what I came up with. I know I am very late to the conversation, but here it is anyway.

function secsToTime(secs){
  var time = new Date(); 
  // create Date object and set to today's date and time
  time.setHours(parseInt(secs/3600) % 24);
  time.setMinutes(parseInt(secs/60) % 60);
  time.setSeconds(parseInt(secs%60));
  time = time.toTimeString().split(" ")[0];
  // time.toString() = "HH:mm:ss GMT-0800 (PST)"
  // time.toString().split(" ") = ["HH:mm:ss", "GMT-0800", "(PST)"]
  // time.toTimeString().split(" ")[0]; = "HH:mm:ss"
  return time;
}

I create a new Date object, change the time to my parameters, convert the Date Object to a time string, and removed the additional stuff by splitting the string and returning only the part that need.

I thought I would share this approach, since it removes the need for regex, logic and math acrobatics to get the results in "HH:mm:ss" format, and instead it relies on built in methods.

You may want to take a look at the documentation here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date

4

below is the given code which will convert seconds into hh-mm-ss format:

var measuredTime = new Date(null);
measuredTime.setSeconds(4995); // specify value of SECONDS
var MHSTime = measuredTime.toISOString().substr(11, 8);

Get alternative method from Convert seconds to HH-MM-SS format in JavaScript

1
4

Simple function to convert seconds into in hh:mm:ss format :

function getHHMMSSFromSeconds(totalSeconds) {
    if (!totalSeconds) {
      return '00:00:00';
    }
    const hours = Math.floor(totalSeconds / 3600);
    const minutes = Math.floor(totalSeconds % 3600 / 60);
    const seconds = totalSeconds % 60;
    const hhmmss = padTo2(hours) + ':' + padTo2(minutes) + ':' + padTo2(seconds);
    return hhmmss;
}

// function to convert single digit to double digit
function padTo2(value) {
    if (!value) {
      return '00';
    }
    return value < 10 ? String(value).padStart(2, '0') : value;
}
3
var time1 = date1.getTime();
var time2 = date2.getTime();
var totalMilisec = time2 - time1;

alert(DateFormat('hh:mm:ss',new Date(totalMilisec)))

 /* ----------------------------------------------------------
 *  Field        | Full Form          | Short Form
 *  -------------|--------------------|-----------------------
 *  Year         | yyyy (4 digits)    | yy (2 digits)
 *  Month        | MMM (abbr.)        | MM (2 digits)
                 | NNN (name)         |
 *  Day of Month | dd (2 digits)      | 
 *  Day of Week  | EE (name)          | E (abbr)
 *  Hour (1-12)  | hh (2 digits)      | 
 *  Minute       | mm (2 digits)      | 
 *  Second       | ss (2 digits)      | 
 *  ----------------------------------------------------------
 */
function DateFormat(formatString,date){
    if (typeof date=='undefined'){
    var DateToFormat=new Date();
    }
    else{
        var DateToFormat=date;
    }
    var DAY         = DateToFormat.getDate();
    var DAYidx      = DateToFormat.getDay();
    var MONTH       = DateToFormat.getMonth()+1;
    var MONTHidx    = DateToFormat.getMonth();
    var YEAR        = DateToFormat.getYear();
    var FULL_YEAR   = DateToFormat.getFullYear();
    var HOUR        = DateToFormat.getHours();
    var MINUTES     = DateToFormat.getMinutes();
    var SECONDS     = DateToFormat.getSeconds();

    var arrMonths = new Array("January","February","March","April","May","June","July","August","September","October","November","December");
    var arrDay=new Array('Sunday','Monday','Tuesday','Wednesday','Thursday','Friday','Saturday');
    var strMONTH;
    var strDAY;
    var strHOUR;
    var strMINUTES;
    var strSECONDS;
    var Separator;

    if(parseInt(MONTH)< 10 && MONTH.toString().length < 2)
        strMONTH = "0" + MONTH;
    else
        strMONTH=MONTH;
    if(parseInt(DAY)< 10 && DAY.toString().length < 2)
        strDAY = "0" + DAY;
    else
        strDAY=DAY;
    if(parseInt(HOUR)< 10 && HOUR.toString().length < 2)
        strHOUR = "0" + HOUR;
    else
        strHOUR=HOUR;
    if(parseInt(MINUTES)< 10 && MINUTES.toString().length < 2)
        strMINUTES = "0" + MINUTES;
    else
        strMINUTES=MINUTES;
    if(parseInt(SECONDS)< 10 && SECONDS.toString().length < 2)
        strSECONDS = "0" + SECONDS;
    else
        strSECONDS=SECONDS;

    switch (formatString){
        case "hh:mm:ss":
            return strHOUR + ':' + strMINUTES + ':' + strSECONDS;
        break;
        //More cases to meet your requirements.
    }
}
3

I just wanted to give a little explanation to the nice answer above:

var totalSec = new Date().getTime() / 1000;
var hours = parseInt( totalSec / 3600 ) % 24;
var minutes = parseInt( totalSec / 60 ) % 60;
var seconds = totalSec % 60;

var result = (hours < 10 ? "0" + hours : hours) + "-" + (minutes < 10 ? "0" + minutes : minutes) + "-" + (seconds  < 10 ? "0" + seconds : seconds);

On the second line, since there are 3600 seconds in 1 hour, we divide the total number of seconds by 3600 to get the total number of hours. We use parseInt to strip off any decimal. If totalSec was 12600 (3 and half hours), then parseInt( totalSec / 3600 ) would return 3, since we will have 3 full hours. Why do we need the % 24 in this case? If we exceed 24 hours, let's say we have 25 hours (90000 seconds), then the modulo here will take us back to 1 again, rather than returning 25. It is confining the result within a 24 hour limit, since there are 24 hours in one day.

When you see something like this:

25 % 24

Think of it like this:

25 mod 24 or what is the remainder when we divide 25 by 24
3

None of the answers here satisfies my requirements as I want to be able to handle

  1. Large numbers of seconds (days), and
  2. Negative numbers

Although those are not required by the OP, it's good practice to cover edge cases, especially when it takes little effort.

It's pretty obvious is that the OP means a NUMBER of seconds when he says seconds. Why would peg your function on String?

function secondsToTimeSpan(seconds) {
    const value = Math.abs(seconds);
    const days = Math.floor(value / 1440);
    const hours = Math.floor((value - (days * 1440)) / 3600);
    const min = Math.floor((value - (days * 1440) - (hours * 3600)) / 60);
    const sec = value - (days * 1440) - (hours * 3600) - (min * 60);
    return `${seconds < 0 ? '-':''}${days > 0 ? days + '.':''}${hours < 10 ? '0' + hours:hours}:${min < 10 ? '0' + min:min}:${sec < 10 ? '0' + sec:sec}`
}
secondsToTimeSpan(0);       // => 00:00:00
secondsToTimeSpan(1);       // => 00:00:01
secondsToTimeSpan(1440);    // => 1.00:00:00
secondsToTimeSpan(-1440);   // => -1.00:00:00
secondsToTimeSpan(-1);      // => -00:00:01
1
  • 1
    secondsToTimeSpan(8991) returns 6.00:05:51 whereas i think it should return 00:02:29:51 Jul 6, 2019 at 7:11
3
export const secondsToHHMMSS = (seconds) => {
  const HH = `${Math.floor(seconds / 3600)}`.padStart(2, '0');
  const MM = `${Math.floor(seconds / 60) % 60}`.padStart(2, '0');
  const SS = `${Math.floor(seconds % 60)}`.padStart(2, '0');
  return [HH, MM, SS].join(':');
};
2
  • 1
    Great solution! This seems to work best for my situation. I will always need HH to show even if its 00: Thank you.
    – Jessica
    Dec 14, 2022 at 0:22
  • Works greatly with 24H+ seconds as well.
    – Neo
    Aug 30, 2023 at 10:39
2

Here is a function to convert seconds to hh-mm-ss format based on powtac's answer here

jsfiddle

/** 
 * Convert seconds to hh-mm-ss format.
 * @param {number} totalSeconds - the total seconds to convert to hh- mm-ss
**/
var SecondsTohhmmss = function(totalSeconds) {
  var hours   = Math.floor(totalSeconds / 3600);
  var minutes = Math.floor((totalSeconds - (hours * 3600)) / 60);
  var seconds = totalSeconds - (hours * 3600) - (minutes * 60);

  // round seconds
  seconds = Math.round(seconds * 100) / 100

  var result = (hours < 10 ? "0" + hours : hours);
      result += "-" + (minutes < 10 ? "0" + minutes : minutes);
      result += "-" + (seconds  < 10 ? "0" + seconds : seconds);
  return result;
}

Example use

var seconds = SecondsTohhmmss(70);
console.log(seconds);
// logs 00-01-10
2

There are lots of options of solve this problem, and obvious there are good option suggested about, But I wants to add one more optimized code here

function formatSeconds(sec) {
     return [(sec / 3600), ((sec % 3600) / 60), ((sec % 3600) % 60)]
            .map(v => v < 10 ? "0" + parseInt(v) : parseInt(v))
            .filter((i, j) => i !== "00" || j > 0)
            .join(":");
}

if you don't wants formatted zero with less then 10 number, you can use

function formatSeconds(sec) {
  return parseInt(sec / 3600) + ':' + parseInt((sec % 3600) / 60) + ':' + parseInt((sec % 3600) % 60);

}

Sample Code http://fiddly.org/1c476/1

2

In one line, using T.J. Crowder's solution :

secToHHMMSS = seconds => `${Math.floor(seconds / 3600)}:${Math.floor((seconds % 3600) / 60)}:${Math.floor((seconds % 3600) % 60)}`

In one line, another solution that also count days :

secToDHHMMSS = seconds => `${parseInt(seconds / 86400)}d ${new Date(seconds * 1000).toISOString().substr(11, 8)}`

Source : https://gist.github.com/martinbean/2bf88c446be8048814cf02b2641ba276

2
var sec_to_hms = function(sec){
var min, hours;
     sec = sec - (min = Math.floor(sec/60))*60;
     min = min - (hours = Math.floor(min/60))*60;
     return (hours?hours+':':'') + ((min+'').padStart(2, '0')) + ':'+ ((sec+'').padStart(2, '0'));
}
alert(sec_to_hms(2442542));
2

Have you tried adding seconds to a Date object?

Date.prototype.addSeconds = function(seconds) {
    this.setSeconds(this.getSeconds() + seconds);
};
var dt = new Date();
dt.addSeconds(1234);

A sample: https://jsfiddle.net/j5g2p0dc/5/

Updated: Sample link was missing so I created a new one.

3
  • Uncaught TypeError: dt.addSeconds is not a function
    – Ikrom
    Jun 11, 2018 at 11:10
  • @Ikrom check the sample, I created a new one in jsfiddle since the old one returned 404 error
    – kpull1
    Jun 18, 2018 at 14:15
  • Looks like I didn't release that you were using custom method addSeconds on Date object like Date.prototype.addSeconds = function(seconds){...}. Yes, it works, thanks for the update.
    – Ikrom
    Jun 18, 2018 at 15:17
2

You can use ES6 generator to create highly customizable time strings.

Here is the general function to convert a number to an array from a given scale:

function toScaledArray(n,scales){
  function* g(x, n=0){
    if(x>0) {
      yield x%(scales[n]||Infinity);
      yield* g(Math.floor(x/scales[n]),n+1)
    }
  }
  return [...g(n)]
}

console.log(toScaledArray(6,[10,10]))
console.log(toScaledArray(2000,[30,12]))
console.log(toScaledArray(45000,[24,30,12]))

So, we can use it to create time strings as follows:

> toScaledArray(45000,[60,60]).reverse().join(":")
< '12:30:0'
> toScaledArray(1234,[60,60]).reverse().join(":")
< '20:34'

The function can be also written in one line:

[...(function* g(x,n=0,scales=[60,60]){if(x>0) {yield x%(scales[n]||Infinity); yield* g(Math.floor(x/scales[n]),n+1,scales)}})(45000)].reverse().join("-")

Functions above will omit the leading zeros, if you want to convert a string into precisely 'HH-MM-SS', you can use

[...(function* g(x,n=0,scales=[60,60]){if(x>0||n<3) {yield x%(scales[n]||Infinity); yield* g(Math.floor(x/scales[n]),n+1,scales)}})(45000)].reverse().map(x=>String(x).padStart(2, '0')).join("-")

Also, if what you need is '[H:]MM:SS', here we have:

Number.prototype.toTimeString = function(){
  return [...(function* g(x,n=0,scales=[60,60]){if(x>0||n<2) {yield x%(scales[n]||Infinity); yield* g(Math.floor(x/scales[n]),n+1,scales)}})(this)].map((x,n)=>n<2?String(x).padStart(2,'0'):x).reverse().join(":")
}

console.log(12,(12).toTimeString())
console.log(345,(345).toTimeString())
console.log(6789,(6789).toTimeString())

and you can also have D(ay) or even M(onth) and Y(ear) (not precisely though) as follows:

> toScaledArray(123456789,[60,60,24,30,12]).map((x,n)=>n<2?String(x).padStart(2,'0'):x).reverse().join(":")
< '3:11:18:21:33:09'

Here the output means "3 years 11 months 18 days 21 hours 33 minutes and 9 seconds"

In conclusion, this is a highly customizable way to convert a number into scaled arrays, which can be used in time string conversion, human readable byte conversion or even change for paper money.

1

You can also use below code:

int ss = nDur%60;
nDur   = nDur/60;
int mm = nDur%60;
int hh = nDur/60;
1

For anyone using AngularJS, a simple solution is to filter the value with the date API, which converts milliseconds to a string based on the requested format. Example:

<div>Offer ends in {{ timeRemaining | date: 'HH:mm:ss' }}</div>

Note that this expects milliseconds, so you may want to multiply timeRemaining by 1000 if you are converting from seconds (as the original question was formulated).

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