
Security News
Official Go SDK for MCP in Development, Stable Release Expected in August
The official Go SDK for the Model Context Protocol is in development, with a stable, production-ready release expected by August 2025.
@stdlib/time
Advanced tools
We believe in a future in which the web is a preferred environment for numerical computation. To help realize this future, we've built stdlib. stdlib is a standard library, with an emphasis on numerical and scientific computation, written in JavaScript (and C) for execution in browsers and in Node.js.
The library is fully decomposable, being architected in such a way that you can swap out and mix and match APIs and functionality to cater to your exact preferences and use cases.
When you use stdlib, you can be absolutely certain that you are using the most thorough, rigorous, well-written, studied, documented, tested, measured, and high-quality code out there.
To join us in bringing numerical computing to the web, get started by checking us out on GitHub, and please consider financially supporting stdlib. We greatly appreciate your continued support!
Time utilities.
npm install @stdlib/time
var time = require( '@stdlib/time' );
Namespace containing time utilities.
var ns = time;
// returns {...}
dayOfQuarter( [month[, day, year]] )
: determine the day of the quarter.dayOfYear( [month[, day, year]] )
: determine the day of the year.daysInMonth( [month[, year]] )
: determine the number of days in a month.daysInYear( [value] )
: determine the number of days in a year according to the Gregorian calendar.hoursInMonth( [month[, year]] )
: determine the number of hours in a month.hoursInYear( [value] )
: determine the number of hours in a year according to the Gregorian calendar.isoWeeksInYear( [value] )
: determine the number of ISO weeks in a year according to the Gregorian calendar.minutesInMonth( [month[, year]] )
: determine the number of minutes in a month.minutesInYear( [value] )
: determine the number of minutes in a year according to the Gregorian calendar.quarterOfYear( [month] )
: determine the quarter of the year.secondsInMonth( [month[, year]] )
: determine the number of seconds in a month.secondsInYear( [value] )
: determine the number of seconds in a year according to the Gregorian calendar.var num = time.daysInYear( 2000 );
// returns 366
num = time.hoursInMonth( 2, 2017 );
// returns 672
tic()
: return a high-resolution time.toc( time )
: return a high-resolution time difference.var time = require( '@stdlib/time' );
var start = time.tic();
setTimeout( onTimeout, 2000 );
function onTimeout() {
var elapsed = time.toc( start );
console.log( 'Elapsed: %d seconds and %d nanoseconds', elapsed[0], elapsed[1] );
}
var objectKeys = require( '@stdlib/utils/keys' );
var time = require( '@stdlib/time' );
console.log( objectKeys( time ) );
This package is part of stdlib, a standard library for JavaScript and Node.js, with an emphasis on numerical and scientific computing. The library provides a collection of robust, high performance libraries for mathematics, statistics, streams, utilities, and more.
For more information on the project, filing bug reports and feature requests, and guidance on how to develop stdlib, see the main project repository.
See LICENSE.
Copyright © 2016-2024. The Stdlib Authors.
0.3.3 (2024-11-05)
No changes reported for this release.
</section> <!-- /.release --> <section class="release" id="v0.3.2">FAQs
Time utilities.
The npm package @stdlib/time receives a total of 12,887 weekly downloads. As such, @stdlib/time popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @stdlib/time demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
The official Go SDK for the Model Context Protocol is in development, with a stable, production-ready release expected by August 2025.
Security News
New research reveals that LLMs often fake understanding, passing benchmarks but failing to apply concepts or stay internally consistent.
Security News
Django has updated its security policies to reject AI-generated vulnerability reports that include fabricated or unverifiable content.