timeunit
Advanced tools
Port of Doug Lea's TimeUnit Java class to JavaScript.
Weekly downloads
Changelog
1.1.1
Readme
TimeUnit is a port of Doug Lea's public domain TimeUnit Java class
to JavaScript. It was ported from the
backport-util-concurrent version.
This class is the basis for java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit
from JavaSE.
Ported by Jason Walton, released under the public domain.
A timeunit
represents time durations at a given unit of
granularity and provides utility methods to convert across units,
and to perform delay operations in these units. A
timeunit
does not maintain time information, but only
helps organize and use time representations that may be maintained
separately across various contexts.
A timeunit
is mainly used to inform time-based methods
how a given timing parameter should be interpreted. Time units may be passed as constants
to other methods:
wait(50, timeunit.seconds);
Or can be used to perform conversions, such as converting 5 seconds into 5000 milliseconds:
timeunit.seconds.toMilliseconds(5); // Returns 5000
timeunit.milliseconds.convert(5, timeunit.seconds); // Returns 5000
timeunit
also define the very handy sleep()
function, which schedules a function for future
execution using setTimeout()
:
timeunit.seconds.sleep(5, function() {
console.log("Hello after 5 seconds!");
});
Perhaps even more useful in CoffeeScript, where it is a little easier to use that setTimeout, since it follows the "callback at the end" idiom used by most node.js code:
timeunit.seconds.sleep 5, () ->
console.log "Hello world"
As opposed to the somewhat less pretty:
setTimeout (()->
console.log "Hello world"
), 5000
A nanosecond is defined as one thousandth of a microsecond, a microsecond as one thousandth of a millisecond, a millisecond as one thousandth of a second, a minute as sixty seconds, an hour as sixty minutes, and a day as twenty four hours.
timeunit
uses UMD for it's module definition, so should work in
node.js, in the browser (via the timeunit
global), via
AMD/Require.js and via browersify.
Install in node.js with:
npm install timeunit
Install with:
bower install timeunit
FAQs
Port of Doug Lea's TimeUnit Java class to JavaScript.
The npm package timeunit receives a total of 569 weekly downloads. As such, timeunit popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that timeunit demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket installs a Github app to automatically flag issues on every pull request and report the health of your dependencies. Find out what is inside your node modules and prevent malicious activity before you update the dependencies.