rmm5t / jquery-timeago
jQuery plugin that makes it easy to support automatically updating fuzzy timestamps (e.g. "4 minutes ago" or "about 1 day ago").
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Language:JavaScript
Requires
- components/jquery: >=1.5.0 <4.0
README
Timeago is a jQuery plugin that makes it easy to support automatically updating fuzzy timestamps (e.g. "4 minutes ago" or "about 1 day ago") from ISO 8601 formatted dates and times embedded in your HTML (à la microformats).
Usage
First, load jQuery and the plugin:
<script src="jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script> <script src="jquery.timeago.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
Now, let's attach it to your timestamps on DOM ready - put this in the head section:
<script type="text/javascript"> jQuery(document).ready(function() { $("time.timeago").timeago(); }); </script>
This will turn all <time>
elements with a class of timeago
and a
datetime
attribute formatted according to the
ISO 8601 standard:
<time class="timeago" datetime="2011-12-17T09:24:17Z">December 17, 2011</time>
into something like this:
<time class="timeago" datetime="2011-12-17T09:24:17Z" title="December 17, 2011">about 1 day ago</time>
<abbr>
elements (or any other HTML elements) are also supported (this is for
legacy microformat support
and was originally supported by the library before the time
element was
introduced to HTML5):
<abbr class="timeago" title="2011-12-17T09:24:17Z">December 17, 2011</abbr>
As time passes, the timestamps will automatically update.
If you want to update a timestamp programatically later, call the update
function with a new ISO8601 timestamp of Date
object. For example:
$("time#some_id").timeago("update", "2013-12-17T09:24:17Z"); // or $("time#some_id").timeago("update", new Date());
For more usage and examples: http://timeago.yarp.com/
For different language configurations: visit the locales
directory.
Settings
cutoff
: Return the original date if time distance is older than cutoff
(miliseconds).
// Display original dates older than 24 hours jQuery.timeago.settings.cutoff = 1000*60*60*24;