quartzite
v2.0.1
Published
Lightweight relative date/time formatter without external dependencies.
Downloads
3
Maintainers
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Quartzite
Lightweight relative date/time formatter without external dependencies.
The formatter offers three styles - short
, medium
and long
.
Styles
| Short | Medium | Long | | --- | --- | --- | | now | Just now | Today, 18:00 | | 25s | 25 seconds ago | Today, 18:00 | | 30m | 30 minutes ago | Today, 17:30 | | 18h | Today | Today 00:00 | | 2d | Yesterday | Yesterday, 07:00 | | 5d | November 7 | Thursday, November 7th | | Oct 8, 2018 | October 8, 2018 | October 8th, 2018 | | In 25s | In 25 seconds | Today, 10:00 | | In 30m | In 30 minutes | Today, 10:30 | | In 18h | Tomorrow | Tomorrow, 04:00 | | In 2d | Thursday | Thursday, 10:00 | | In 5d | November 17 | Sunday, November 17th | | Dec 16, 2020 | December 16, 2020 | December 16th, 2020 |
Installation
Using npm
$ npm install quartzite
Using cdn
<script src="https://unpkg.com/quartzite/dist/quartzite.js"></script>
Example
Importing as ES6 module
import * as quartzite from 'quartzite';
or using CommonJS
const quartzite = require('quartzite');
Create date in the past
const date = new Date();
const yesterday = quartzite.dateByAdding('hours', date, -25);
Create date in the future
const date = new Date();
const someday = quartzite.dateByAdding('days', date, 5);
Format date using medium
style
console.log(quartzite.dateString(yesterday)); // Medium is the default option
console.log(quartzite.dateString(someday, 'medium'));
Format date using short
style
console.log(quartzite.dateString(someday, 'short'));
Format date using long
style
console.log(quartzite.dateString(someday, 'long'));
License
Licensed under the MIT License.