147

I am having similar requirement as this: Convert time in HH:MM:SS format to seconds only?

but in javascript. I have seen many examples of converting seconds into different formats but not HH:MM:SS into seconds.

7
  • oops.. sorry for the typo. yes, it's time hh:mm:ss
    – Sri Reddy
    Mar 9, 2012 at 20:10
  • What is the DD in HH:MM:DD? Mar 9, 2012 at 20:10
  • 2
    It's the same algorithm as is in that PHP question. Mar 9, 2012 at 20:11
  • Well.. H(Hour) == 3600 seconds, M(minute) == 60 seconds... so.. Mar 9, 2012 at 20:13
  • 1
    Only solution I think of is to split the string in array and then multiply 3600 to hour and multiply 60 to min and add all with seconds part. Is this is the simplest solution?
    – Sri Reddy
    Mar 9, 2012 at 20:13

16 Answers 16

258

Try this:

var hms = '02:04:33';   // your input string
var a = hms.split(':'); // split it at the colons

// minutes are worth 60 seconds. Hours are worth 60 minutes.
var seconds = (+a[0]) * 60 * 60 + (+a[1]) * 60 + (+a[2]); 

console.log(seconds);

3
  • 6
    Here's a prototype version of this! String.prototype.toSeconds = function () { if (!this) return null; var hms = this.split(':'); return (+hms[0]) * 60 * 60 + (+hms[1]) * 60 + (+hms[2] || 0); } NOTE: the || 0 at the end is good for any implementation of this code - it prevents issues with a (still valid) time representation of HH:MM (Chrome type="time" inputs will output in this format when seconds=0). May 6, 2016 at 0:47
  • 8
    The use of "+" operator to convert numeric string to number is not a good idea. It's short and looks "clever", but it's confusing and not clean code. Use parseInt(x, 10) instead. And avoid one-liner. Also prevent errors by undefined input. For example: it's not a string, has no ":" or only "HH:MM". etc.
    – Dominik
    Sep 26, 2017 at 14:09
  • Can't say I'm a fan of the legibility of shenanigans with + either, personally, but it actually seems to reject a lot more highly questionable input as NaN than parseInt() does. parseInt(s, 10) accepts roughly ^\s*([+-]?\d+).*$, which wouldn't be so bad if it weren't for the fact it basically silently munches up any junk after the last \d... Bit of a menace by itself, with the name it has and everything, if you ask me. Any function that claims to 'parse ints' but thinks '6ix9ine' is a number not a rapper, and that '1 000 000' == 1 & '26,507' = 26 is getting side-eye.'
    – Joey Sabey
    Nov 14, 2023 at 6:18
97

This function handels "HH:MM:SS" as well as "MM:SS" or "SS".

function hmsToSecondsOnly(str) {
    var p = str.split(':'),
        s = 0, m = 1;

    while (p.length > 0) {
        s += m * parseInt(p.pop(), 10);
        m *= 60;
    }

    return s;
}
0
66

This can be done quite resiliently with the following:

'01:02:03'.split(':').reduce((acc,time) => (60 * acc) + +time);

This is because each unit of time within the hours, minutes and seconds is a multiple of 60 greater than the smaller unit. Time is split into hour minutes and seconds components, then reduced to seconds by using the accumulated value of the higher units multiplied by 60 as it goes through each unit.

The +time is used to cast the time to a number.

It basically ends up doing: (60 * ((60 * HHHH) + MM)) + SS

If only seconds is passed then the result would be a string, so to fix that we could cast the entire result to an int:

+('03'.split(':').reduce((acc,time) => (60 * acc) + +time));
11
  • thats actually pretty damn clever.. question is how fast this is compared to a calculation Sep 20, 2017 at 17:35
  • 5
    Yes it's clever, but a good example of creating difficult to maintain code for no practical gain. It saves 4 characters when minified vs a minified version of the accepted answer. Given that many web pages are now in excess of 1MB, that saving is somewhat less than insignificant.
    – RobG
    May 19, 2018 at 9:24
  • 9
    Although this answer isn't as comprehensible, it does gracefully handle both HH:MM:SS as well as MM:SS, while the accepted answer does not.
    – ckeeney
    Aug 31, 2018 at 18:45
  • 3
    This one has a type conversion bug, if there only the seconds portion is given. You need to explicit inititlise the memo with 0 to prevent it. Works: '03'.split(':').reduce((acc,time) => (60 * acc) + +time, 0); Fails because returns an unexpected string: '03'.split(':').reduce((acc,time) => (60 * acc) + +time); Mar 16, 2019 at 10:35
  • 1
    @KhadijaDaruwala You can split the string by your separator (space) '2 h 10 m'.split(' ') to make it an array, access the correct offsets, multiply by the units (seonds in an hour, seconds in a minute), and add.
    – Paul
    Jan 11, 2022 at 2:37
17

Since the getTime function of the Date object gets the milliseconds since 1970/01/01, we can do this:

var time = '12:23:00';
var seconds = new Date('1970-01-01T' + time + 'Z').getTime() / 1000;
2
  • 1
    Just realized, this doesnt work with daylight savings time. Need to use the actual date
    – Yablargo
    Jun 13, 2013 at 3:08
  • 2
    @Yablargo Thanks. Previous version didn't work very well with local timezone, so i edited it to use iso 8601 utc datetime format.
    – boskop
    Jul 15, 2013 at 10:30
15

Convert hh:mm:ss string to seconds in one line. Also allowed h:m:s format and mm:ss, m:s etc

'08:45:20'.split(':').reverse().reduce((prev, curr, i) => prev + curr*Math.pow(60, i), 0)
7
  • 4
    Please explain your answer
    – B001ᛦ
    Nov 10, 2016 at 13:43
  • Convert hh:mm:ss string to seconds in one line. Also allowed h:m:s format and mm:ss, m:s etc.
    – Paul Hide
    Nov 25, 2016 at 12:56
  • Nice answer! But you could skip the reverse(): '00:01:11'.split(':').reduce((val, entry, i) => val + entry * (3600/Math.pow(60, i)), 0) === 71
    – CMR
    Jan 7, 2017 at 20:55
  • @CMR, interesting aproach, but in case of mm:ss it will not work correctly.
    – Paul Hide
    Jan 9, 2017 at 13:43
  • Math.pow is very slow and can be avoided as shown in other answers based on reduce May 3, 2020 at 13:57
14

This is the most clear, easy to understand solution:

function convertDurationtoSeconds(duration){
    const [hours, minutes, seconds] = duration.split(':');
    return Number(hours) * 60 * 60 + Number(minutes) * 60 + Number(seconds);
};

const input = '01:30:45';
const output = convertDurationtoSeconds(input);
console.log(`${input} is ${output} in seconds`);

2
  • My time input is in '2 h 10 m' format. How can I convert this into seconds? Jan 7, 2022 at 8:43
  • you need to default seconds to 0, for when they are omitted like in 'HH:MM' Jul 7, 2022 at 15:59
11

try

time="12:12:12";
tt=time.split(":");
sec=tt[0]*3600+tt[1]*60+tt[2]*1;
1
  • 6
    ah, that *1 is a clever way to get it not to do string concatenation :) Mar 9, 2012 at 20:22
8

Here is maybe a bit more readable form on the original approved answer.

const getSeconds = (hms: string) : number => {
  const [hours, minutes, seconds] = hms.split(':');
  return (+hours) * 60 * 60 + (+minutes) * 60 + (+seconds);
};
1
  • 3
    You should mention that this is TYPESCRIPT, and WON'T WORK if you copy and paste this as VANILLA JAVASCRIPT.
    – Jack_Hu
    Feb 26, 2022 at 0:50
5

Javascript's static method Date.UTC() does the trick:

alert(getSeconds('00:22:17'));

function getSeconds(time)
{
    var ts = time.split(':');
    return Date.UTC(1970, 0, 1, ts[0], ts[1], ts[2]) / 1000;
}
1
  • Nice trick with Date.UTC(), though note that this does assume that there are always two colons in the string, so parsing "12:42" wouldn't work without additional handling.
    – jdunning
    Mar 13, 2023 at 0:01
2
new Date(moment('23:04:33', "HH:mm")).getTime()

Output: 1499755980000 (in millisecond) ( 1499755980000/1000) (in second)

Note : this output calculate diff from 1970-01-01 12:0:0 to now and we need to implement the moment.js

2
  • OP asked for seconds not milliseconds
    – Ori Marko
    Jul 11, 2017 at 7:51
  • Hi user7294900, Thx for your comment i ll update my answer, jst we need divide by 1000
    – ITsDEv
    Jul 27, 2017 at 8:06
2

This is very old question, but here is two liner very easy to understand answer and it works with any of the following format

  • hh:mm:ss or h:m:s

  • mm:ss or m:s

  • ss or s

    function convertToSecs =(strTime){
        let [s=0, m=0, h=0] = strTime.split(':').reverse();
        return (+h) * 3600 + (+m) * 60 + (+s); 
    };
    
1

This function works for MM:SS as well:

const convertTime = (hms) => {
        if (hms.length <3){
         return hms
        } else if (hms.length <6){
          const a = hms.split(':')
          return hms = (+a[0]) * 60 + (+a[1])
        } else {
          const a = hms.split(':')
          return hms = (+a[0]) * 60 * 60 + (+a[1]) * 60 + (+a[2])
        }
      }

1

Taken from the solution given by Paul https://stackoverflow.com/a/45292588/1191101 but using the old function notation so it can also be used in other js engines (e.g. java Rhino)

function strToSeconds (stime)
{
   return +(stime.split(':').reduce(function (acc,time) { return +(60 * acc) + +time }));
}

or just this one more readable

function strToSeconds (stime)
{
  var tt = stime.split(':').reverse ();
  return ((tt.length >= 3) ? (+tt[2]): 0)*60*60 + 
         ((tt.length >= 2) ? (+tt[1]): 0)*60 + 
         ((tt.length >= 1) ? (+tt[0]): 0);
}
0

I would suggest a slightly different approach to most other answers here:

// Solution:
const hmsToSeconds = s => /^\d+:\d+:\d+$/.test(s) ? s.split(':').reduce((x, y) => x * 60 | y) : NaN;


// Test cases to check correctness:
`0:0:0
0:0:1
0:1:0
1:0:0
1:1:1
1:1
1
:1:1
1:1:f
foo`
.split('\n')
.forEach(s => console.log(`${s} = ${hmsToSeconds(s)}`));

This isn't just because it's fun to write your own little one-liner; I believe this is probably a safer option than the other answers most of the time.

There is a dangerous flaw in the logic behind the several answers saying e.g. 'this code will also handle mm:ss and ss!', in that it confidently assumes that when it consumes, say, '13:37' that it should be reading '13 minutes & 37 seconds', rather than '23 minutes to 2'.

The opposite assumption would probably be the safer bet, I would personally have though. But ultimately it is best to not make any assumptions without actual solid basis in the actual sources of data the specific system is going to encounter. The last thing you want is a bad assumption like this in a tiny snippet of code buried deep in your codebase to go off like a landmine when months down the line data from a slightly different source starts failing silently.

This solution should pretty confidently reject anything not in the exact form '<int>:<int>:<int>' and just evaluate to NaN. This is likely to be noticed much sooner than the system (potentially intermittently!) be off in some calculations by a factor of 60.

-1

function parsehhmmsst(arg) {
	var result = 0, arr = arg.split(':')
	if (arr[0] < 12) {
		result = arr[0] * 3600 // hours
	}
	result += arr[1] * 60 // minutes
	result += parseInt(arr[2]) // seconds
	if (arg.indexOf('P') > -1) {  // 8:00 PM > 8:00 AM
		result += 43200
	}
	return result
}
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('12:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('1:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('2:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('3:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('4:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('5:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('6:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('7:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('8:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('9:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('10:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('11:00:00 AM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('12:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('1:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('2:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('3:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('4:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('5:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('6:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('7:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('8:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('9:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('10:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
$('body').append(parsehhmmsst('11:00:00 PM') + '<br>')
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

-1

You can do this dynamically - in case you encounter not only: HH:mm:ss, but also, mm:ss, or even ss alone.

var str = '12:99:07';
var times = str.split(":");
times.reverse();
var x = times.length, y = 0, z;
for (var i = 0; i < x; i++) {
    z = times[i] * Math.pow(60, i);
    y += z;
}
console.log(y);

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