A small (< 1kb minified + gzipped) javascript package to parse and serialize ISO-8601 durations. This package does only 2 things:
- It parses a duration string to an object
- (e.g.
P1DT12H
to{ days: 1, hours: 12 }
)
- (e.g.
- The reverse, i.e. serialize an object to a string.
This lib has 0 dependencies.
- NPM:
npm install --save tinyduration
- Yarn:
yarn add tinyduration
import { parse, serialize } from 'tinyduration'
// Basic parsing
const durationObj = parse('P1Y2M3DT4H5M6S')
assert(durationObj, {
years: 1,
months: 2,
days: 3,
hours: 4,
minutes: 5,
seconds: 6,
})
// Serialization
assert(serialize(durationObj), 'P1Y2M3DT4H5M6S')
This library is written in TypeScript.
During publication of the package, the code is transpiled to javascript and put into the dist
folder.
The tests can be found the src
folder under *.test.ts
, testing is done using Jest
Additional commands you'll need for development:
yarn test
to run all testsyarn lint
to run the linteryarn prettify
to auto-fix the indenting issuesyarn ci
to run coverage and linting
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
negative | boolean or undefined |
Duration is positive if undefined |
years | number or undefined |
|
months | number or undefined |
|
weeks | number or undefined |
|
days | number or undefined |
|
hours | number or undefined |
|
minutes | number or undefined |
|
seconds | number or undefined |
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
allowMultipleFractions | boolean or undefined |
Defaults to true . |
parse
accepts a string and returns a Duration
object.
No attempt is made to change lower units into higher ones, e.g. to change 120 minutes into 2 hours.
Throws InvalidDurationError
if an invalid duration string is supplied.
Throws MultipleFractionsError
if an the duration string contains multiple fractions while disabled in the config.
According to the spec multiple fractions are not allowed. Currently this is not enforced and the allowMultipleFractions
config parameter defaults to true
.
import { parse } from 'tinyduration'
const duration = parse('P1W')
assert(duration, { weeks: 1 })
try {
parse('invalid-duration')
} catch (e) {
assert(e.message === 'Invalid duration')
}
serialize
accepts a Duration object and returns a serialized duration according to ISO-8601.
If the duration is empty (i.e. all values are 0), PT0S
is returned.
import * as Duration from 'tinyduration'
const durationStr = Duration.serialize({ weeks: 1 })
assert(durationStr, 'P1W')
const durationStr = Duration.serialize({})
assert(durationStr, 'PT0S')
MIT