forked from FINAKON/HelpProject
1. Initial Commit - a boiler plate code and POC to realize the concept of context sensitive help 2. Frontend code written in ReactJS 3. Backend code written in Java, Spring Boot Framework 4. Frontend Start: pre-requisites : node, npm npm run dev ==> to start the frontend vite server 5. Backend Start: pre-requisites : java, mvn mvn spring-boot:run ==> to start the backend server 6. Visit http://localhost:5173/ for basic demo of help, press F1 in textboxes 7. Visit http://localhost:5173/editor and enter "admin123" to add/modify texts. Happy Coding !!! Thank you, Bhargava.
1.8 KiB
1.8 KiB
ms
Use this package to easily convert various time formats to milliseconds.
Examples
ms('2 days') // 172800000
ms('1d') // 86400000
ms('10h') // 36000000
ms('2.5 hrs') // 9000000
ms('2h') // 7200000
ms('1m') // 60000
ms('5s') // 5000
ms('1y') // 31557600000
ms('100') // 100
ms('-3 days') // -259200000
ms('-1h') // -3600000
ms('-200') // -200
Convert from Milliseconds
ms(60000) // "1m"
ms(2 * 60000) // "2m"
ms(-3 * 60000) // "-3m"
ms(ms('10 hours')) // "10h"
Time Format Written-Out
ms(60000, { long: true }) // "1 minute"
ms(2 * 60000, { long: true }) // "2 minutes"
ms(-3 * 60000, { long: true }) // "-3 minutes"
ms(ms('10 hours'), { long: true }) // "10 hours"
Features
- Works both in Node.js and in the browser
- If a number is supplied to
ms
, a string with a unit is returned - If a string that contains the number is supplied, it returns it as a number (e.g.: it returns
100
for'100'
) - If you pass a string with a number and a valid unit, the number of equivalent milliseconds is returned
Related Packages
- ms.macro - Run
ms
as a macro at build-time.
Caught a Bug?
- Fork this repository to your own GitHub account and then clone it to your local device
- Link the package to the global module directory:
npm link
- Within the module you want to test your local development instance of ms, just link it to the dependencies:
npm link ms
. Instead of the default one from npm, Node.js will now use your clone of ms!
As always, you can run the tests using: npm test