Let's say I just ran for 10 km and I now have 10 1km split times in the form of MM::SS. I want a simple way to add up an arbitrary number of the split times and average them. For instance, maybe I want to see how much faster (or slower) the last 5 km were when compared with the first 5 km.
I can do this myself by parsing the times, dividing them into seconds and then converting them back to MM::SS. The math isn't hard, but I was wondering if something on CPAN already does this in a simple way. My first attempt was using DateTime, but it doesn't convert from seconds to minutes, because of leap seconds.
To be clear, I don't care about leap seconds in this context, but I'm curious as to whether a library exists. As an example, here is what I have tried.
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use feature qw( say );
use DateTime::Format::Duration;
my $formatter = DateTime::Format::Duration->new( pattern => '%M:%S' );
my @splits = @ARGV;
my $split_number = @splits;
my $total = $formatter->parse_duration( shift @splits );
foreach my $split (@splits) {
$total->add_duration(
$formatter->parse_duration($split) );
}
say 'Total time: ' . join ':', $total->minutes, $total->seconds;
$total->multiply( 1 / $split_number );
say 'Average time: ' . join ':', $total->minutes, $total->seconds;
say 'Using DateTime::Format::Duration: ' . $formatter->format_duration( $total );
And a sample run:
$ perl script/add-splits.pl 1:30 2:30
Total time: 3:60
Average time: 1.5:30
Using DateTime::Format::Duration: 01:30
So, you can see that the duration object itself, gives me a correct answer, but not something that a human wants to decipher.
DateTime::Format::Duration tries to be helpful, but tosses out 30 seconds in the process.
I'm not looking for the raw code to do this. I am interested in whether this already exists on CPAN.
3 (min)/2
has to return1.5
. They say that in docs, bothDateTime
and::Duration
(the link to that explanation is in my answer). I got interested in this question and searched all date/time modules I know of or could find, and found nothing that can do sum/ave ofmm:ss
correctly. (Your1:30
+2:30
is a good test case for both.)