A simple Ruby natural language parser for elapsed time. (For example, 4 hours and 30 minutes, 6 minutes 4 seconds, 3 days, etc.) Returns all results in seconds. Will return an integer unless you get tricky and need a float. (4 minutes and 13.47 seconds, for example.)
The reverse can also be accomplished with the output method. So pass in seconds and you can get strings like 4 mins 31.51 secs (default format), 4h 3m 30s, or 4:01:29.
$ sudo gem sources -a http://gemcutter.org $ sudo gem install chronic_duration
>> require 'chronic_duration' => true >> ChronicDuration.parse('4 minutes and 30 seconds') => 270 >> ChronicDuration.output(270) => 4 mins 30 secs >> ChronicDuration.output(270, :format => :short) => 4m 30s >> ChronicDuration.output(270, :format => :long) => 4 minutes 30 seconds >> ChronicDuration.output(270, :format => :chrono) => 4:30
Nil is returned if the string can’t be parsed
Examples of parse-able strings:
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‘12.4 secs’
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‘1:20’
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‘1:20.51’
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‘4:01:01’
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‘3 mins 4 sec’
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‘2 hrs 20 min’
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‘2h20min’
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‘6 mos 1 day’
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‘47 yrs 6 mos and 4d’
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‘two hours and twenty minutes’
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‘3 weeks and 2 days’
ChronicDuration.raise_exceptions can be set to true to raise exceptions when the string can’t be parsed.
>> ChronicDuration.raise_exceptions = true => true >> ChronicDuration.parse('4 elephants and 3 Astroids') ChronicDuration::DurationParseError: An invalid word "elephants" was used in the string to be parsed.
brianjlandau, jduff, olauzon, roboman
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Benchmark, optimize
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Context specific matching (E.g., for ‘4m30s’, assume ‘m’ is minutes not months)
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Smartly parse vacation-like durations (E.g., ‘4 days and 3 nights’)
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:chrono output option should probably change to something like 4 days 4:00:12 instead of 4:04:00:12
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Other locale support