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Hello I have a counter who works perfectly formatted like DD HH mm ss but I don't successed to transform in YY MM DD HH

Here is the working format

      var  _lastConso = lastConsoString!=null ? DateTime.parse(lastConsoString) : DateTime.now();
      var  duration_conso = DateTime.now().difference(_lastConso);
      final newDuration =_formatDuration_conso(duration_conso);
      String _finalDuration_conso = newDuration; //_finalDuration_conso is the string I use to display counter

String _formatDuration_conso(Duration duration) {
    String twoDigits(int n) {
      if (n >= 10) return "$n";
      return "0$n";
    }

    String twoDigitHours = twoDigits(duration.inHours.remainder(24));
    String twoDigitMinutes = twoDigits(duration.inMinutes.remainder(60));
    String twoDigitSeconds = twoDigits(duration.inSeconds.remainder(60));
    return "${twoDigits(duration.inDays)}   $twoDigitHours   $twoDigitMinutes   $twoDigitSeconds";
  }

Here is the example of enzo

String formatDuration(Duration duration) {
  // Create some constants we'll use during the calculation
  const int hoursPerDay = Duration.hoursPerDay;
  const int hoursPerYear = hoursPerDay * 365;
  const int hoursPerMonth = hoursPerDay * 30;
  
  // Calculate the number of years based on the number of the total
  // hours and deduct the number of years from the total hours
  final int years = duration.inHours ~/ hoursPerYear;
  int remainder = duration.inHours % hoursPerYear;
  
  // Do the same for months and days until reach the remaning hours
  final int months = remainder ~/ hoursPerMonth;
  remainder %= hoursPerMonth;
  
  final int days = remainder ~/ hoursPerDay;
  remainder %= hoursPerDay;
  
  final int hours = remainder;

  return [years, months, days, hours]
      // An alternative for your `twoDigit` method: Transform the
      // value into a string and add a zero to it if the length of
      // the string (i.e. number of digits) is lesser than 2
      .map((v) => "$v".padLeft(2, "0"))
      // Join all the values delimited by a space
      .join(" ");
}
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  • Please be more specific. What errors are you running into? Include logs and stacktraces if applicable.
    – caiopo
    Aug 19, 2021 at 19:10
  • just duration.inYears and duration.inMouth doesn't exist, I write like this beceaus it's what I seach to have but it's impossible to do like this. But I don't know how to do
    – Nitneuq
    Aug 19, 2021 at 19:14

1 Answer 1

1

There is no duration.inYears or duration.inMonth properties, so you'll have to calculate it by yourself:

String formatDuration(Duration duration) {
  // Create some constants we'll use during the calculation
  const int hoursPerDay = Duration.hoursPerDay;
  const int hoursPerYear = hoursPerDay * 365;
  const int hoursPerMonth = hoursPerDay * 30;
  
  // Calculate the number of years based on the number of the total
  // hours and deduct the number of years from the total hours
  final int years = duration.inHours ~/ hoursPerYear;
  int remainder = duration.inHours % hoursPerYear;
  
  // Do the same for months and days until reach the remaning hours
  final int months = remainder ~/ hoursPerMonth;
  remainder %= hoursPerMonth;
  
  final int days = remainder ~/ hoursPerDay;
  remainder %= hoursPerDay;
  
  final int hours = remainder;

  // An alternative for your `twoDigit` method: Transform the
  // value into a string and add a zero to it if the length of
  // the string (i.e. number of digits) is lesser than 2
  // Finally, join all the values delimited by a space
  return [years, months, days, hours].map((v) => "$v".padLeft(2, "0")).join(" ");
}

Usage example:

print(formatDuration(Duration(days: 500, minutes: 1200)));
// Outputs 01 04 15 20

Note that this code assumes that every month contains 30 days, so it depends on your use case.


You may argue that you could calculate it as

final int years = duration.inDays ~/ 365;
final int months = duration.inDays ~/ 30;
final int days = duration.inDays;
final int hours = duration.inHours;

If you do so, the output will be 01 16 500 12020 (1 year, 16 months, 500 days and 12020 hours) instead of 01 04 15 20 (1 year, 4 months, 15 days and 20 hours), so again it depends on your use case.

6
  • thank you so much, it seems to print the correct counter, but I have a problem of compatibility, in this exemple in print well, but in output I have nothing display, I don't successed to have the same format like return "$twoDigityears $twoDigitmonth $twoDigitdays" $twoDigithours";
    – Nitneuq
    Aug 19, 2021 at 20:29
  • Sorry, I’m afraid I don’t follow you - do you want to return a formatted string instead of building a list and then joining it?
    – enzo
    Aug 19, 2021 at 20:46
  • Yes I don't successed to return a string instead of list, I add specific space between each pair of digit to match with text below
    – Nitneuq
    Aug 19, 2021 at 20:52
  • Try replacing .join(" ") with .join(" ") (three spaces instead of one).
    – enzo
    Aug 19, 2021 at 20:54
  • Note that I'm not returning the list [years, months, days, hours]. There's a map after the comments below it and there's also a join, which will join the elements of the list into a single string. I've edited my answer to make it more clear. If you have any question, feel free to ask!
    – enzo
    Aug 19, 2021 at 20:55

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