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. Any help would be appreciated.
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. Any help would be appreciated.
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);
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
hh:mm
not seconds
in this case what i have to modify..?
Dec 21, 2016 at 6:02
var seconds = (+a[0]) * 60 * 60 + (+a[1]) * 60 + (+a[2]);
to var seconds = (+a[0]) * 60 * 60 + (+a[1]) * 60;
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;
}
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));
HH:MM:SS
as well as MM:SS
, while the accepted answer does not.
'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
(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.
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;
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)
hh:mm:ss
string to seconds in one line. Also allowed h:m:s
format and mm:ss
, m:s
etc.
Nov 25, 2016 at 12:56
reverse()
: '00:01:11'.split(':').reduce((val, entry, i) => val + entry * (3600/Math.pow(60, i)), 0) === 71
mm:ss
it will not work correctly.
Jan 9, 2017 at 13:43
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`);
try
time="12:12:12";
tt=time.split(":");
sec=tt[0]*3600+tt[1]*60+tt[2]*1;
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);
};
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;
}
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
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])
}
}
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);
}
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>
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);
DD
inHH:MM:DD
?