Is there a way to see the date of a commit in github, with day/hour precision? Older commits appear in a "human readable" format, such as "2 years ago" instead of showing the actual date.
If it's not possible to see the actual date on github, is there a easier workaround than git clone
?
Hover your mouse over the
2 years ago
and you'll get the timestamp.The real date does not appear for me upon hovering "2 years ago", despite the text being wrapped by a
<time>
element with an iso value under itsdatetime
attribute.If all else fails, like it did for me, try inspecting the text.
Sample element:
<time datetime="2015-01-22T20:48:13Z" is="relative-time" title="Jan 22, 2015, 2:48 PM CST">7 days ago</time>
you can just use this js bookmark:
https://gist.github.com/PhilippGrulich/7051832b344d4cbd30fbfd68524baa38
It adds just the correct time: Like this: committed 21 hours ago -- 15. Feb. 2017, 15:49 MEZ
I tried @odony's TamperMonkey/Greasemonkey script on Chrome but couldn't get it to work.
detachCallback()
wasn't recognized. So instead of detaching any callbacks, I simply replaced the<relative-time>
node.Sorry I haven't tested this with other browser, but since this is basic javascript, it should just work. :)
If you're looking for a way to display the date/time permanently without hovering (e.g. for screenshots), the above Javascript-based solutions do not match the latest Github HTML (see comments). And they did not take into account the fact that the timestamps are auto-updated based on a timer ("X minutes ago" has to change every minute), so they will periodically reappear.
The following script seems to work on Github as of 2020-01-27:
You can make this a bookmarklet by prefixing the code with
javascript:
as in the other JS-based solution.And if you want to make this a permanent fix, you can save this as a TamperMonkey/Greasemonkey script, as follows:
That's not very pretty but it seems to do the job.
With gitlab 10 I used this to add the tooltip title to the element as standard text: