bbdb68a6de
Esta commit conteudo a estrutura atomica completa:
- types: Result<T,E>, AsyncState<T>, Paginated<T>, SortConfig<T>
- utils: date, str, num, cn, debounce, throttle, storage, arr, obj
- validators: Zod schemas — email, password, uuid, url, phone, CPF/CNPJ, sanitizedStr, safeParse
- hooks: useToggle, useAsync, useDebounce, useLocalStorage, useMedia, useInterval, useOnClickOutside, useClipboard, useFetch
- components: Button, Input, Alert, Card, Spinner (atomic design pattern)
- build: tsup v8 ESM+CJS + DTS + sourcemaps — 0 erros
- tests: 57 testes 100% usuarios
- docker: multi-stage Dockerfile (node 20-alpine)
- config: vitest, tsup, tsconfig strict, .npmignore
Filosofia atomica:/utils ← /types ← /validators ← /hooks ← /components
Build: npm run build | Test: npm test | Publish: npm publish
🤖 Generated with Pulse (openclaw + nova-self-improver)
ms
Use this package to easily convert various time formats to milliseconds.
Examples
ms('2 days') // 172800000
ms('1d') // 86400000
ms('10h') // 36000000
ms('2.5 hrs') // 9000000
ms('2h') // 7200000
ms('1m') // 60000
ms('5s') // 5000
ms('1y') // 31557600000
ms('100') // 100
ms('-3 days') // -259200000
ms('-1h') // -3600000
ms('-200') // -200
Convert from Milliseconds
ms(60000) // "1m"
ms(2 * 60000) // "2m"
ms(-3 * 60000) // "-3m"
ms(ms('10 hours')) // "10h"
Time Format Written-Out
ms(60000, { long: true }) // "1 minute"
ms(2 * 60000, { long: true }) // "2 minutes"
ms(-3 * 60000, { long: true }) // "-3 minutes"
ms(ms('10 hours'), { long: true }) // "10 hours"
Features
- Works both in Node.js and in the browser
- If a number is supplied to
ms, a string with a unit is returned - If a string that contains the number is supplied, it returns it as a number (e.g.: it returns
100for'100') - If you pass a string with a number and a valid unit, the number of equivalent milliseconds is returned
Related Packages
- ms.macro - Run
msas a macro at build-time.
Caught a Bug?
- Fork this repository to your own GitHub account and then clone it to your local device
- Link the package to the global module directory:
npm link - Within the module you want to test your local development instance of ms, just link it to the dependencies:
npm link ms. Instead of the default one from npm, Node.js will now use your clone of ms!
As always, you can run the tests using: npm test