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AS::Duration

This gem is an extraction of ActiveSupport::Duration from Rails, along with the related core extensions.

Ruby 2.0 or greater is required.

Why not simply use ActiveSupport?

If you're in a Rails project, then you should use ActiveSupport::Duration. Otherwise there are several reason why you might prefer as-duration:

  • You simply don't want to have ActiveSupport as a dependency
  • You want to control what you require. You may think that requiring active_support/core_ext/integer/time will only require what you want, but in fact it will require a total of 5000 LOC (a lot of those are additional core extensions which you may not have wanted). as-duration has only under 200 LOC, and only gives you what you've asked for.

Is it well tested?

It sure is! I copied all the related tests from Rails, and modified them so that they work standalone. So, as-duration passes all of Rails' tests.

Installation

gem 'as-duration'

Features

NOTE: In most cases as-duration should work exactly like ActiveSupport::Duration. However, there are a few modifications made, mostly removing some of the magic, see Modifications.

Numeric methods

The following methods are added on Numeric (Float and Integer):

# plural versions
2.seconds
3.minutes
4.hours
5.days
6.weeks
7.fortnights
8.months
9.years

# singular versions
1.second
1.minute
1.hour
1.day
1.week
1.fortnight
1.month
1.year

The only exception is #months and #years which are only added to Integer (to maintain precision in calculations).

Duration/Time arithmetics

You can add and subtract durations from Time or Date objects.

Time.now + 2.hours
Date.today + 1.year

When you add seconds/minutes/hours to a Date, the Date is automatically converted to a Time object.

(Date.today + 1.minute).class #=> Time

As syntax sugar, you can also call time methods on the duration object:

# forward in time
1.year.from_now
2.months.since(Date.new(2015,4,27))
2.months.after(Date.new(2015,4,27))
2.months.from(Date.new(2015,4,27))

# back in time
2.hours.ago
20.minutes.until(Time.now)
20.minutes.before(Time.now)
20.minutes.to(Time.now)

Duration/Duration arithmetics

You can add and subtract durations:

1.week + 1.day
2.minutes - 1.second

Unlike ActiveSupport::Duration, you can't add durations to integers and vice versa. You either have to convert the integer to a duration, or the duration to an integer with AS::Duration#to_i. This is to help you not to mix different time units.

# Bad
10 + 1.minute  # TypeError
1.minute + 10  # TypeError

# Good
10.seconds + 1.minute  # AS::Duration
1.minute.to_i + 10     # Integer

Modifications to ActiveSupport::Duration

The behaviour of ActiveSupport::Duration has been slightly modified, mostly to remove some magic:

  • Added #from, #after, #before and #to to AS::Duration
  • #from_now and #ago cannot take any arguments, they always use the current time (passing an argument doesn't read well, better to use #from and #until)
  • Removed support for DateTime
    • DateTime was first introduced in Ruby so that you can represent time that the Time class at the moment wasn't able to. However, the Time class improved over time and removed those limitations, so there is no more need to use DateTime
  • Year lasts 365 days instead of 365.25
  • AS::Duration doesn't act like an Integer
    • to compare it with an integer you have to either convert the integer to a duration or convert the duration to an integer (with #to_i)
    • you can only add and subtract two duration objects
  • Removed hash equality

License

MIT