4

How to convert 24.hours into minutes it gives me second.

1.9.3p392 :076 > 24.hours
=> 86400 seconds 

One NON-RUBY way is

1.9.3p392 :079 > 24*60
 => 1440 

Is there any ruby or rails way of doing this? i.e. 24.hours_in_minutes

2
  • What do you want to use "24 hours in minutes" for? If you want to add it to a Time, 24.hours is all you need (it doesn't matter that it prints as "86400 seconds" at the REPL).
    – Alex D
    May 16, 2013 at 11:58
  • There's always division. May 16, 2013 at 12:02

3 Answers 3

8

The most appropriate way to do this is probably:

24.hours / 1.minute

This way you keep the readability and clear intention of the 'ruby mindset'.

Of course, this will have a constant value so you should probably store it in an appropriately named constant (e.g. MINUTES_IN_A_DAY) rather than calculating it every time.

2
  • Needs at least require 'active_support/all' or else NoMethodError (undefined method 'hours' for 24:Integer) (PORO / Outside of Rails)
    – Marcos
    Dec 10, 2019 at 20:54
  • @Marcos It should be enough to just require active_support/time - you don't need all of it. Dec 11, 2019 at 10:12
5

in_minutes (Rails 6.1+)

Rails 6.1 introduces new ActiveSupport::Duration conversion methods like in_seconds, in_minutes, in_hours, in_days, in_weeks, in_months, and in_years.

As a result, now, your problem can be solved as simple as:

24.hours.in_minutes
# => 1440.0

Here is a link to the corresponding PR.

1
  • Yet another reason to upgrade to Rails 6. Some slick stuff right here. Aug 11, 2021 at 15:46
1

There is a short way. This will return in seconds

24.hours.to_i or 1.day.to_i

wil return 86400

2
  • Interesting. Not very clear though. If you do end up using this, definitely add a comment for your fellow programmers so they know what's going on. Feb 6, 2020 at 20:28
  • Also, this returns minutes, not seconds, as OP was asking for. Feb 6, 2020 at 20:28

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