Format plugin for the Moment Duration object.
This is a plugin to the Moment.js JavaScript date library to add comprehensive formatting to Moment Durations.
Format template grammar is patterned on the existing Moment Date format template grammar, with a few modifications because durations are fundamentally different from dates.
This plugin does not have any dependencies beyond Moment.js itself, and may be used in the browser and in Node.js.
Where it is available and functional, this plugin uses either Intl.NumberFormat#format
or Number#toLocaleString
to render formatted numerical output. Unfortunately, many environments do not fully implement the full suite of options in their respective specs, and some provide a buggy implementation.
This plugin runs a feature test for each formatter, and will revert to a fallback function to render formatted numerical output if the feature test fails. To force this plugin to always use the fallback number format function, set useToLocaleString
to false
. The fallback number format function output can be localized using options detailed at the bottom of this page. You should, in general, specify the fallback number formatting options if the default "en"
locale formatting would be unacceptable on some devices or in some environments.
This plugin is tested using BrowserStack on a range of Android devices with OS versions from 2.2 to 7, and on a range of iOS devices with OS versions from 4.3 to 11. Also tested on Chrome, Firefox, IE 8-11, and Edge browsers.
Please raise an issue if you notice formatting issues or anomalies in any environment!
A few items remain to finish off Version 2:
-
Add type definitions to support TypeScript, publish NuGet package, and support whatever other packaging options are in use these days.
-
Testing of the plugin should be modernized, ideally to match the Moment.js testing setup.
Having implemented version 2 of the moment-duration-format plugin, there are some obvious improvements for a version 3.
The ideas below are logged as issues and tagged with the 3.0.0 milestone. If you have ideas or comments about what you'd like to see, please log an issue on this project!
-
The fallback number formatting localization options should be included with the Moment Locale object extensions this plugin already adds for localizing duration unit labels. This would put all of the localization configuration in one place.
-
moment-duration-format and its fallback number formatting function do not follow the same API as
Number#toLocaleString
for significant digits and faction digits. The fallback function should be updated to use thetoLocaleString
API, and the plugin should expose the API options directly rather than hiding some of the options and masking them behindprecision
anduseSignificantDigits
options. -
Exposing the fallback number formatting function as well as the formatter feature test function would facilitate testing and allow them to be used outside of the context of formatting durations.
The plugin depends on moment.js, which is not specified as a package dependency in the currently published version.
Node.js
npm install moment-duration-format
Bower
bower install moment-duration-format
Browser
<script src="path/to/moment-duration-format.js"></script>
This plugin will always try to install itself on the root.moment
instance, if it exists.
This plugin will install its setup function to root.momentDurationFormatSetup
so that it may be later called on any moment instance.
When using this plugin in the browser, if you do not include moment.js on your page first, you need to manually call window.momentDurationFormatSetup
on your moment instance once it is created.
To use this plugin as a module, use the require
function.
var moment = require("moment");
var momentDurationFormatSetup = require("moment-duration-format");
The plugin exports the init function so that duration format can be initialized on other moment instances.
To use this plugin with any other moment.js package, for example moment-timezone
, manually call the exported setup function to install the plugin into the desired package.
var moment = require("moment-timezone");
var momentDurationFormatSetup = require("moment-duration-format");
momentDurationFormatSetup(moment);
typeof moment.duration.fn.format === "function";
// true
typeof moment.duration.format === "function";
// true
moment.duration.fn.format
The duration.fn.format
method can format any moment duration. If no template or other arguments are provided, the default template function will generate a template string based on the duration's value.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format();
// "2:03:00"
moment.duration(123, "months").format();
// "10 years, 3 months"
The duration format method may be called with three optional arguments, and returns a formatted string.
moment.duration(value, units).format([template] [, precision] [, settings])
// formattedString
moment.duration.format
The duration.format
method allows coordinated formatting of multiple moment durations at once. This function accepts an array of durations as its first argument, then the same three optional arguments as the duration.fn.format
function. This function returns an array of formatted strings.
moment.duration.format(durationsArray, [template] [, precision] [, settings]);
// formattedStringsArray
All of the options that are available to the single duration format function can be used with the multiple duration format function. A single settings object is used to format each of the individual durations.
moment.duration.format([
moment.duration(1, "second"),
moment.duration(1, "minute"),
moment.duration(1, "hour")
], "d [days] hh:mm:ss");
// ["0:00:01", "0:01:00", "1:00:00"]
Invalid durations are treated as having a value of 0
for formatting.
var invalidDuration = moment.duration(NaN, "second");
invalidDuration.isValid();
// false
invalidDuration.format();
// "0 seconds"
template
(string|function) is the string used to create the formatted output, or a function that returns the string to be used as the format template.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("h:mm");
// "2:03"
The template string is parsed for moment token characters, which are replaced with the duration's value for each unit type. The moment tokens are:
years: Y or y
months: M
weeks: W or w
days: D or d
hours: H or h
minutes: m
seconds: s
ms: S
Escape token characters within the template string using square brackets.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("h [hrs], m [min]");
// "2 hrs, 3 mins"
For some time duration formats, a zero-padded value is required. Use multiple token characters together to create the correct amount of padding.
moment.duration(3661, "seconds").format("h:mm:ss");
// "1:01:01"
moment.duration(15, "seconds").format("sss [s]");
// "015 s"
When the format template is trimmed, token length on the largest-magnitude rendered token can be trimmed as well. See sections trim and forceLength below for more details.
moment.duration(123, "seconds").format("h:mm:ss");
// "2:03"
Token length of 2
for milliseconds is a special case, most likely used to render milliseconds as part of a timer output, such as mm:ss:SS
. In this case, the milliseconds value is padded to three digits then truncated from the left to render a two digit output.
moment.duration(9, "milliseconds").format("mm:ss:SS", {
trim: false
});
// "00:00:00"
moment.duration(10, "milliseconds").format("mm:ss:SS", {
trim: false
});
// "00:00:01"
moment.duration(999, "milliseconds").format("mm:ss:SS", {
trim: false
});
// "00:00:99"
moment.duration(1011, "milliseconds").format("mm:ss:SS", {
trim: false
});
// "00:01:01"
Tokens can appear multiple times in the format template, but all instances must share the same length. If they do not, all instances will be rendered at the length of the first token of that type.
moment.duration(15, "seconds").format("ssss sss ss s");
// "0015 0015 0015 0015"
moment.duration(15, "seconds").format("s ss sss ssss");
// "15 15 15 15"
The default template function attempts to format a duration based on its magnitude. The larger the duration value, the larger the units of the formatted output will be.
For some duration values, the default template function will default trim
to "both"
if that option is not set in the settings object (more on that below).
The default template function uses auto-localized unit labels (more on that below, also).
moment.duration(100, "milliseconds").format();
// "100 milliseconds"
moment.duration(100, "seconds").format();
// "1:40"
moment.duration(100, "days").format();
// "3 months, 9 days"
moment.duration(100, "weeks").format();
// "1 year, 10 months, 30 days"
moment.duration(100, "months").format();
// "8 years, 4 months"
Use a custom template function if you need runtime control over the template string. Template functions are executed with a this
binding of the settings object, and have access to the underlying duration object via this.duration
. Any of the settings may be accessed or modified by the template function.
This custom template function uses a different template based on the value of the duration:
function customTemplate() {
return this.duration.asSeconds() >= 86400 ? "w [weeks], d [days]" : "hh:mm:ss";
}
moment.duration(65, 'seconds').format(customTemplate, {
trim: false
});
// "00:01:05"
moment.duration(1347840, 'seconds').format(customTemplate, {
trim: false
});
// "2 weeks, 2 days"
To ensure user-friendly formatted output, punctuation characters are trimmed from the beginning and end of the formatted output. Specifically, leading and trailing period .
, comma ,
, colon :
, and space
characters are removed.
precision
(number) defines the number of decimal fraction or integer digits to display for the final value.
The default precision value is 0
.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("h [hrs]");
// "2 hrs"
Positive precision defines the number of decimal fraction digits to display.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("h [hrs]", 2);
// "2.05 hrs"
Negative precision defines the number of integer digits to truncate to zero.
moment.duration(223, "minutes").format("m [min]", -2);
// "200 mins"
settings
is an object that can override any of the default moment duration format options.
Both the template
and precision
arguments may be specified as properties of a single settings
object argument, or they may be passed separately along with an optional settings object.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format({
template: "h [hrs]",
precision: 2
});
// "2.05 hrs"
The default trim
behaviour is "large"
.
Largest-magnitude tokens are automatically trimmed when they have no value.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss");
// "2:03:00"
Trimming also functions when the format string is oriented with token magnitude increasing from left to right.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("s [seconds], m [minutes], h [hours], d [days]");
// "0 seconds, 3 minutes, 2 hours"
To stop trimming altogether, set { trim: false }
.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss", {
trim: false
});
// "0d 2:03:00"
When formatting multiple durations using moment.duration.format
, trimming for all of the durations is coordinated on the union of the set of durations.
moment.duration.format([
moment.duration(1, "minute"),
moment.duration(1, "hour"),
moment.duration(1, "day")
], "y [years], w [weeks], d [days], h [hours], m [minutes]");
// [
// "0 days, 0 hours, 1 minute",
// "0 days, 1 hour, 0 minutes",
// "1 day, 0 hours, 0 minutes"
// ]
trim
can be a string, a delimited list of strings, an array of strings, or a boolean. Accepted values are as follows:
Trim largest-magnitude zero-value tokens until finding a token with a value, a token identified as stopTrim
, or the final token of the format string. This is the default trim
value.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss");
// "2:03:00"
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss", {
trim: "large"
});
// "2:03:00"
moment.duration(0, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss", {
trim: "large"
});
// "0"
Trim smallest-magnitude zero-value tokens until finding a token with a value, a token identified as stopTrim
, or the final token of the format string.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss", {
trim: "small"
});
// "0d 2:03"
moment.duration(0, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss", {
trim: "small"
});
// "0d"
Execute "large"
trim then "small"
trim.
moment.duration(123, "minutes").format("d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "both"
});
// "2h 3m"
moment.duration(0, "minutes").format("d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "both"
});
// "0s"
Trim any zero-value tokens that are not the first or last tokens. Usually used in conjunction with "large"
or "both"
. e.g. "large mid"
or "both mid"
.
moment.duration(1441, "minutes").format("w[w] d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "mid"
});
// "0w 1d 1m 0s"
moment.duration(1441, "minutes").format("w[w] d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "large mid"
});
// "1d 1m 0s"
moment.duration(1441, "minutes").format("w[w] d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "small mid"
});
// "0w 1d 1m"
moment.duration(1441, "minutes").format("w[w] d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "both mid"
});
// "1d 1m"
moment.duration(0, "minutes").format("w[w] d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "both mid"
});
// "0s"
Trim the final token if it is zero-value. Use this option with "large"
or "both"
to output an empty string when formatting a zero-value duration. e.g. "large final"
or "both final"
.
moment.duration(0, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss", {
trim: "large final"
});
// ""
moment.duration(0, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss", {
trim: "small final"
});
// ""
moment.duration(0, "minutes").format("d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "both final"
});
// ""
Trim all zero-value tokens. Shorthand for "both mid final"
.
moment.duration(0, "minutes").format("d[d] h[h] m[m] s[s]", {
trim: "all"
});
// ""
Maps to "large"
to support this plugin's version 1 API.
Maps to "large"
to support this plugin's version 1 API.
Maps to "large"
.
Maps to "large"
.
Disables trimming.
Set largest
to a positive integer to output only the n
largest-magnitude moment tokens, starting with the largest-magnitude token that has a value.
Using the largest
option defaults trim
to "all"
.
moment.duration(7322, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
largest: 2
});
// "2 hours, 2 minutes"
moment.duration(1216800, "seconds").format("y [years], w [weeks], d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
largest: 3
});
// "2 weeks, 2 hours"
Setting trim
to a different value, or using stopTrim
can change the starting token as well as the remaining output.
moment.duration(1216800, "seconds").format("y [years], w [weeks], d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
largest: 3,
trim: "both"
});
// "2 weeks, 0 days, 2 hours"
moment.duration(1216800, "seconds").format("y [years], w [weeks], d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
largest: 3,
trim: "both",
stopTrim: "m"
});
// "2 weeks, 0 days, 2 hours"
moment.duration(1216800, "seconds").format("y [years], w [weeks], d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
largest: 4,
trim: false
});
// "2 weeks, 0 days, 2 hours, 0 minutes"
moment.duration(2, "hours").format("y [years], d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
trim: "both",
stopTrim: "d m",
largest: 2
});
// "0 days 2 hours"
Trimming will stop when a token listed in this option is reached.
Option value may be a moment token string, a delimited set of moment token strings, or an array of moment token strings. Alternatively, set stopTrim
on tokens in the format template string directly using a *
character before the moment token.
moment.duration(23, "minutes").format("d[d] h:mm:ss", {
stopTrim: "h"
});
// "0:23:00"
moment.duration(23, "minutes").format("d[d] *h:mm:ss");
// "0:23:00"
This option affects all trimming modes: "large"
, "small"
, "mid"
, and "final"
.
moment.duration(2, "hours").format("y [years], d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
trim: "both",
stopTrim: "d m"
});
// "0 days, 2 hours, 0 minutes"
moment.duration(2, "hours").format("y [years], *d [days], h [hours], *m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
trim: "both"
});
// "0 days, 2 hours, 0 minutes"
Default behavior rounds the final token value.
moment.duration(179, "seconds").format("m [minutes]");
// "3 minutes"
moment.duration(3780, "seconds").format("h [hours]", 1);
// "1.1 hours"
Set trunc
to true
to truncate final token value. This was the default behavior in version 1 of this plugin.
moment.duration(179, "seconds").format("m [minutes]", {
trunc: true
});
// "2 minutes"
moment.duration(3780, "seconds").format("h [hours]", 1, {
trunc: true
});
// "1.0 hours"
Using trunc
can affect the operation of trim
and largest
.
moment.duration(59, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes]", {
trunc: true,
trim: "both"
});
// "0 minutes"
moment.duration(59, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes]", {
trunc: true,
trim: "all"
});
// ""
moment.duration(59, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes]", {
trunc: true,
largest: 1
});
// ""
Use minValue
to render generalized output for small duration values, e.g. "< 5 minutes"
. minValue
must be a positive number and is applied to the least-magnitude moment token in the format template.
moment.duration(59, "seconds").format("h [hours], m [minutes]", {
minValue: 1
});
// "< 1 minute"
The minimum value will bubble up to larger-magnitude units if they are present in the format template.
moment.duration(59, "seconds").format("m:ss", {
minValue: 60
});
// "< 1:00"
This option can be used in conjunction with trim
, and is not affected by trunc
.
moment.duration(59, "seconds").format("h [hours], m [minutes]", {
minValue: 1,
trim: "both"
});
// "< 1 minute"
moment.duration(59, "seconds").format("h [hours], m [minutes]", {
minValue: 1,
trunc: true,
trim: "both"
});
// "< 1 minute"
moment.duration(59, "seconds").format("h [hours], m [minutes]", {
minValue: 1,
trim: false
});
// "< 0 hours, 1 minute"
minValue
can be used with negative durations, where it has the same effect on the least-magnitude moment token's absolute value.
moment.duration(-59, "seconds").format("h [hours], m [minutes]", {
minValue: 1
});
// "> -1 minute"
If minValue
is a non-integer number, precision
should be set as well so that the formatted output makes sense.
moment.duration(89, "seconds").format("m", {
minValue: 1.5,
precision: 1
});
// "< 1.5"
moment.duration(90, "seconds").format("m", {
minValue: 1.5,
precision: 1
});
// "1.5"
Use maxValue
to render generalized output for large duration values, e.g. "> 60 days"
. maxValue
must be a positive number and is applied to the greatest-magnitude moment token in the format template. As with minValue
, this option can be used in conjunction with trim
, is not affected by trunc
, and can be used with negative durations.
Using the maxValue
option defaults trim
to "all"
.
moment.duration(15, "days").format("w [weeks]", {
maxValue: 2
});
// "> 2 weeks"
moment.duration(-15, "days").format("w [weeks]]", {
maxValue: 2
});
// "< -2 weeks"
maxValue
can be used with trim
and largest
, but when the maximum value is reached, all lesser-magnitude token values are forced to 0
.
moment.duration(15.5, "days").format("w [weeks], d [days], h [hours]", {
maxValue: 2,
trim: false,
largest: 2
});
// "> 2 weeks, 0 days"
If maxValue
is a non-integer number, precision
should be set as well so that the formatted output makes sense.
moment.duration(89, "seconds").format("m", {
minValue: 1.5,
precision: 1
});
// "< 1.5"
moment.duration(90, "seconds").format("m", {
minValue: 1.5,
precision: 1
});
// "1.5"
Force the first moment token with a value to render at full length, even when the template is trimmed and the first moment token has a length of 1
. Sounds more complicated than it is.
moment.duration(123, "seconds").format("h:mm:ss");
// "2:03"
If you want minutes to always be rendered with two digits, you can use a first token with a length greater than 1 (this stops the automatic token length trimming for the first token that has a value).
moment.duration(123, "seconds").format("hh:mm:ss");
// "02:03"
Or you can use { forceLength: true }
.
moment.duration(123, "seconds").format("h:mm:ss", {
forceLength: true
});
// "02:03"
When useSignificantDigits
is set to true
, the precision
option determines the maximum significant digits to be rendered. Precision must be a positive integer. Significant digits extend across unit types, e.g. "6 hours 37.5 minutes"
represents 4
significant digits. Enabling this option causes token length to be ignored.
Using the useSignificantDigits
option defaults trim
to "all"
.
Setting trunc
affects the operation of useSignificantDigits
.
See the documentation for toLocaleString for more information on significant digits.
moment.duration(99999, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
useSignificantDigits: true,
precision: 3
});
// "1 day, 3 hours, 50 minutes"
moment.duration(99999, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
useSignificantDigits: true,
precision: 3,
trunc: true
});
// "1 day, 3 hours, 40 minutes"
moment.duration(99999, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
useSignificantDigits: true,
precision: 5
});
// "1 day, 3 hours, 46 minutes, 40 seconds"
moment.duration(99999, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
useSignificantDigits: true,
trunc: true,
precision: 5
});
// "1 day, 3 hours, 46 minutes, 30 seconds"
moment.duration(99999, "seconds").format("d [days], h [hours], m [minutes], s [seconds]", {
useSignificantDigits: true,
precision: 6
});
// "1 day, 3 hours, 46 minutes, 39 seconds"
useSignificantDigits
can be used together with trim
.
moment.duration(12.55, "hours").format("h:mm", {
precision: 2,
useSignificantDigits: true,
trim: false
});
// "13:00"
moment.duration(12.55, "hours").format("h:mm", {
precision: 2,
useSignificantDigits: true,
trim: false,
trunc: true
});
// "12:00"
Formatted numerical output is rendered using Intl.NumberFormat#format
or toLocaleString
where available, as long as they pass a feature test on plugin initialization. If the feature tests fail, a fallback format function is used. See below for details on localizing output from the fallback format function.
Unit labels are automatically localized and pluralized. Unit labels are detected using the locale set in moment.js, which can be different from the locale of user's environment. This plugin uses custom extensions to the moment.js locale object, which can be easily added for any locale (see below).
It's likely that the options below do not address every i18n requirement for duration formatting (the plugin hasn't been tested on languages that are written from right to left, for instance), but they are a significant step in the right direction and support languages with multiple forms of plural).
Numerical output is rendered using the locale set in moment.js, retrieved via moment.locale()
. Set the userLocale
option to render numerical output using a different locale.
moment.duration(1234567, "seconds").format("m [minutes]", 3);
// "20,576.117 minutes"
moment.duration(1234567, "seconds").format("m [minutes]", 3, {
userLocale: "de-DE"
});
// "20.576,117 minutes"
The _
character can be used to generate auto-localized unit labels in the formatted output.
A single underscore _
will be replaced with the short duration unit label for its associated moment token.
A double underscore __
will be replaced with the standard duration unit label for its associated moment token.
moment.duration(2, "minutes").format("m _");
// "2 mins"
moment.duration(2, "minutes").format("m __");
// "2 minutes"
These are the default "en"
locale options for unit labels. Unit label types and even the "_"
character usage can be customized in the locale object extensions (see below).
Durations can also be formatted with a localized time notation.
The string _HMS_
is replaced with a localized hour/minute/second
time notation, e.g. h:mm:ss
.
The string _HM_
is replaced with a localized hour/minute
time notation, e.g. h:mm
.
The string _MS_
is replaced with a localized minute/second
time notation, e.g. m:ss
.
moment.duration(3661, "seconds").format("_HMS_");
// "1:01:01"
moment.duration(3661, "seconds").format("_HM_");
// "1:01"
moment.duration(61, "seconds").format("_MS_");
// "1:01"
These are the default "en"
locale options for duration time notation templates. Additional templates may be created in the locale object extensions (see below).
Unit label pluralization is automatically corrected when unit labels appear in the text associated with each moment token. The default "en"
locale extension includes long and short unit labels, and a basic pluralization function. Unit labels, unit label types, and the pluralization function can be customized for a locale (see below).
moment.duration(1, "minutes").format("m [minutes]");
// "1 minute"
moment.duration(1, "minutes").format("m [mins]");
// "1 min"
moment.duration(2, "minutes").format("m [minute]");
// "2 minutes"
moment.duration(2, "minutes").format("m [min]");
// "2 mins"
Set usePlural
to false
to disable auto-correction of pluralization.
moment.duration(1, "minutes").format("m [minutes]", {
usePlural: false
});
// "1 minutes"
moment.duration(1, "minutes").format("m [mins]", {
usePlural: false
});
// "1 mins"
moment.duration(2, "minutes").format("m [minute]", {
usePlural: false
});
// "2 minute"
moment.duration(2, "minutes").format("m [min]", {
usePlural: false
});
// "2 min"
The default pluralization function for the "en"
locale outputs a plural unit name when a value is rendered with decimal precision.
moment.duration(1, "minutes").format("m [minutes]", 2);
// "1.00 minutes"
The text to the right of each moment token in a template string is treated as that token's units for the purposes of trimming, pluralizing, and localizing. To properly process a template string where the token/unit association is reversed, set useLeftUnits
to true
.
moment.duration(7322, "seconds").format("_ h, _ m, _ s", {
useLeftUnits: true
});
// "hrs 2, mins 2, secs 2"
Formatted numerical output is rendered using toLocaleString
with the option useGrouping
enabled. Set useGrouping
to false
to disable digit grouping.
moment.duration(1234, "seconds").format("s [seconds]");
// "1,234 seconds"
moment.duration(1234, "seconds").format("s [seconds]", {
useGrouping: false
});
// "1234 seconds"
This plugin now extends the moment.js locale
object with duration labels, duration label types, duration time-notation templates, and a pluralization function. The "en"
locale is included with this plugin. Other locales may be defined using the moment.js locale API to provide auto-pluralized and auto-localized unit labels in different languages. If the plugin cannot find the duration locale extensions for the active moment locale, the plugin will fall back to the "en"
locale.
Below is the default "en"
locale extension.
moment.updateLocale('en', {
durationLabelsStandard: {
S: 'millisecond',
SS: 'milliseconds',
s: 'second',
ss: 'seconds',
m: 'minute',
mm: 'minutes',
h: 'hour',
hh: 'hours',
d: 'day',
dd: 'days',
w: 'week',
ww: 'weeks',
M: 'month',
MM: 'months',
y: 'year',
yy: 'years'
},
durationLabelsShort: {
S: 'msec',
SS: 'msecs',
s: 'sec',
ss: 'secs',
m: 'min',
mm: 'mins',
h: 'hr',
hh: 'hrs',
d: 'dy',
dd: 'dys',
w: 'wk',
ww: 'wks',
M: 'mo',
MM: 'mos',
y: 'yr',
yy: 'yrs'
},
durationTimeTemplates: {
HMS: 'h:mm:ss',
HM: 'h:mm',
MS: 'm:ss'
},
durationLabelTypes: [
{ type: "standard", string: "__" },
{ type: "short", string: "_" }
],
durationPluralKey: function (token, integerValue, decimalValue) {
// Singular for a value of `1`, but not for `1.0`.
if (integerValue === 1 && decimalValue === null) {
return token;
}
return token + token;
}
});
The duration extensions for a new locale might look something like the following example, which includes an additional unit label type, a custom time-notation template, and an additional form of plural.
This example provides new values for all of the duration locale extensions. In a new locale, you can include updates for one or more of the duration locale extensions, and any that you do not include will automatically fall back to the "en"
versions in this plugin. e.g. your locale could update only the durationLabelsShort
object, or only the durationPluralKey
function, if those were the only differences from the default "en"
locale configuration.
New types of duration labels must have a key that begins with durationLabels
and must be enumerated in durationLabelTypes
.
This locale uses a single token "s"
for the singular label, a double token "ss"
for the plural label when the value is 2
, and a triple token "sss"
for the plural label for values greater than 3
. For brevity, only labels for the seconds
type are included.
Unit labels are replaced after the format template string is tokenized, so they need not be escaped. Time-notation templates are replaced before the format template string is tokenized, so they must be escaped.
moment.updateLocale('sample', {
durationLabelsLong: {
s: 'singular long second',
ss: 'first long plural seconds',
sss: 'next long plural seconds'
// ...
},
durationLabelsStandard: {
s: 'singular second',
ss: 'first plural seconds',
sss: 'next plural seconds'
// ...
},
durationLabelsShort: {
s: 'singular sec',
ss: 'first plural secs',
sss: 'next plural secs'
// ...
},
durationTimeTemplates: {
HS: 'hh[h].ssss[s]'
// ...
},
durationLabelTypes: [
{ type: "long", string: "___" },
{ type: "standard", string: "__" },
{ type: "short", string: "_" }
],
durationPluralKey: function (token, integerValue, decimalValue) {
// Decimal value does not affect unit label for this locale.
// "xxx" for > 2.
if (integerValue > 2) {
return token + token + token;
}
// "x" for === 1.
if (integerValue === 1) {
return token;
}
// "xx" for others.
return token + token;
}
});
The function for durationPluralKey
is passed three arguments:
token
String. A single character representing the unit type.
years: y
months: M
weeks: w
days: d
hours: h
minutes: m
seconds: s
ms: S
integerValue
Number. The integer portion of the token's value.
decimalValue
Number. The decimal fraction portion of the token's value.
You can (and likely should) set the localization options for the fallback number format function if the default "en"
locale formatting is not acceptable on some devices or in some environments.
Set this option to false
to ignore the Intl.NumberFormat
and toLocaleString
feature tests and force the use of the formatNumber
fallback function included in this plugin.
The fallback number format options will have no effect when Intl.NumberFormat
or toLocaleString
are used. The grouping separator, decimal separator, and integer digit grouping will be determined by the user locale.
moment.duration(100000.1, "seconds").format("s", {
userLocale: "de-DE",
precision: 2,
decimalSeparator: ",",
groupingSeparator: "."
});
// "100.000,10" on all devices and in all environemnts.
The integer digit grouping separator used when using the fallback number format function. Default value is a ,
character.
The decimal separator used when using the fallback number format function. Default value is a .
character.
The integer digit grouping used when using the fallback number format function. Must be an array. The default value of [3]
gives the standard 3-digit thousand/million/billion digit groupings for the "en" locale. Setting this option to [3, 2]
would generate the thousand/lakh/crore digit groupings used in the "en-IN" locale.
// Force the use of the fallback number format function. Do not use toLocaleString or Intl.NumberFormat.
// We're in some sort of strange hybrid french-indian locale...
moment.duration(100000000000, "seconds").format("m", {
useToLocaleString: false,
precision: 2,
decimalSeparator: ",",
groupingSeparator: " ",
grouping: [3, 2]
});
// "1 66 66 66 666,67");