vote up 18 vote down star
3

I want to display dates in the format: short day of week, short month, day of month without leading zero but including "th", "st", "nd", or "rd" suffix.

For example, the day this question was asked would display "Thu Oct 2nd".

I'm using Ruby 1.8.7, and Time.strftime just doesn't seem to do this. I'd prefer a standard library if one exists.

flag

You might want to use the word "suffix" in your question or title to make this easier to find for other people. I'm not sure if there's another word for this when talking about dates. – Harley Oct 3 '08 at 0:16
Excellent question. I was thinking the same thing only a couple of days ago - very helpful. – RichH Oct 3 '08 at 18:10

7 Answers

vote up 30 vote down check
>> time = Time.new
=> Fri Oct 03 01:24:48 +0100 2008
>> time.strftime("%a %b #{time.day.ordinalize}")
=> "Fri Oct 3rd"
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vote up 12 vote down

You can use the ordinalize helper method on numbers.

>> 3.ordinalize
=> "3rd"
>> 2.ordinalize
=> "2nd"
>> 1.ordinalize
=> "1st"
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vote up 6 vote down

Taking Patrick McKenzie's answer just a bit further, you could create a new file in your config/initializers directory called date_format.rb (or whatever you want) and put this in it:

ActiveSupport::CoreExtensions::Time::Conversions::DATE_FORMATS.merge!(
  :my_date => lambda { |time| time.strftime("%a, %b #{time.day.ordinalize}") }
)

Then in your view code you can format any date simply by assigning it your new date format:

My Date: <%= h some_date.to_s(:my_date) %>

It's simple, it works, and is easy to build on. Just add more format lines in the date_format.rb file for each of your different date formats. Here is a more fleshed out example.

ActiveSupport::CoreExtensions::Time::Conversions::DATE_FORMATS.merge!(
   :datetime_military => '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M',
   :datetime          => '%Y-%m-%d %I:%M%P',
   :time              => '%I:%M%P',
   :time_military     => '%H:%M%P',
   :datetime_short    => '%m/%d %I:%M',
   :due_date      => lambda { |time| time.strftime("%a, %b #{time.day.ordinalize}") }
)
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vote up 2 vote down
>> require 'activesupport'
=> []
>> t = Time.now
=> Thu Oct 02 17:28:37 -0700 2008
>> formatted = "#{t.strftime("%a %b")} #{t.day.ordinalize}"
=> "Thu Oct 2nd"
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vote up 1 vote down

I like Bartosz's answer, but hey, since this is Rails we're talking about, let's take it one step up in devious. (Edit: Although I was going to just monkeypatch the following method, turns out there is a cleaner way.)

DateTime instances have a to_formatted_s method supplied by ActiveSupport, which takes a single symbol as a parameter and, if that symbol is recognized as a valid predefined format, returns a String with the appropriate formatting.

Those symbols are defined by Time::DATE_FORMATS, which is a hash of symbols to either strings for the standard formatting function... or procs. Bwahaha.

d = DateTime.now #Examples were executed on October 3rd 2008
Time::DATE_FORMATS[:weekday_month_ordinal] = 
    lambda { |time| time.strftime("%a %b #{time.day.ordinalize}") }
d.to_formatted_s :weekday_month_ordinal #Fri Oct 3rd

But hey, if you can't resist the opportunity to monkeypatch, you could always give that a cleaner interface:

class DateTime

  Time::DATE_FORMATS[:weekday_month_ordinal] = 
      lambda { |time| time.strftime("%a %b #{time.day.ordinalize}") }

  def to_my_special_s
    to_formatted_s :weekday_month_ordinal
  end
end

DateTime.now.to_my_special_s  #Fri Oct 3rd
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vote up 0 vote down

Take a look at the merb-helpers date_time_formatting module, this has the method to_ordinalized, which will do what you want.

http://gist.github.com/14484

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vote up -2 vote down

Ruby came from Japan, right? 1 = tsuitachi, 2 = futsuka, 3 = mikka, ..., 30 = sanjuunichi. Is there really a function for that?

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If you provide them, yes. Rails' ActiveSupport supplies en_us localization. When I do apps for my Japanese coworkers, I use the localization support and add in Japan/Japanese behavior. (1日, 2日, etc) – Patrick McKenzie Oct 3 '08 at 1:41
"1日, 2日, etc" -- cheater! – Windows programmer Oct 3 '08 at 3:52

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