how to convert 270921sec into days + hours + minutes + sec ? (ruby)

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不知归路
不知归路 2020-12-02 06:09

I have a number of seconds. Let\'s say 270921. How can I display that number saying it is xx days, yy hours, zz minutes, ww seconds?

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  •  再見小時候
    2020-12-02 06:15

    I was hoping there would be an easier way than using divmod, but this is the most DRY and reusable way I found to do it:

    def seconds_to_units(seconds)
      '%d days, %d hours, %d minutes, %d seconds' %
        # the .reverse lets us put the larger units first for readability
        [24,60,60].reverse.inject([seconds]) {|result, unitsize|
          result[0,0] = result.shift.divmod(unitsize)
          result
        }
    end
    

    The method is easily adjusted by changing the format string and the first inline array (ie the [24,60,60]).

    Enhanced version

    class TieredUnitFormatter
      # if you set this, '%d' must appear as many times as there are units
      attr_accessor :format_string
    
      def initialize(unit_names=%w(days hours minutes seconds), conversion_factors=[24, 60, 60])
        @unit_names = unit_names
        @factors = conversion_factors
    
        @format_string = unit_names.map {|name| "%d #{name}" }.join(', ')
        # the .reverse helps us iterate more effectively
        @reversed_factors = @factors.reverse
      end
    
      # e.g. seconds
      def format(smallest_unit_amount)
        parts = split(smallest_unit_amount)
        @format_string % parts
      end
    
      def split(smallest_unit_amount)
        # go from smallest to largest unit
        @reversed_factors.inject([smallest_unit_amount]) {|result, unitsize|
          # Remove the most significant item (left side), convert it, then
          # add the 2-element array to the left side of the result.
          result[0,0] = result.shift.divmod(unitsize)
          result
        }
      end
    end
    

    Examples:

    fmt = TieredUnitFormatter.new
    fmt.format(270921)  # => "3 days, 3 hours, 15 minutes, 21 seconds"
    
    fmt = TieredUnitFormatter.new(%w(minutes seconds), [60])
    fmt.format(5454)  # => "90 minutes, 54 seconds"
    fmt.format_string = '%d:%d'
    fmt.format(5454)  # => "90:54"
    

    Note that format_string won't let you change the order of the parts (it's always the most significant value to least). For finer grained control, you can use split and manipulate the values yourself.

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