Here's the algorithm stackoverflow uses but rewritten more concisely in perlish pseudocode with a bug fix (no "one hours ago"). The function takes a (positive) number of seconds ago and returns a human-friendly string like "3 hours ago" or "yesterday".
A couple of years late to the party, but I had a requirement to do this for both past and future dates, so I combined Jeff's and Vincent's into this. It's a ternarytastic extravaganza! :)
public static class DateTimeHelper
{
private const int SECOND = 1;
private const int MINUTE = 60 * SECOND;
private const int HOUR = 60 * MINUTE;
private const int DAY = 24 * HOUR;
private const int MONTH = 30 * DAY;
/// <summary>
/// Returns a friendly version of the provided DateTime, relative to now. E.g.: "2 days ago", or "in 6 months".
/// </summary>
/// <param name="dateTime">The DateTime to compare to Now</param>
/// <returns>A friendly string</returns>
public static string GetFriendlyRelativeTime(DateTime dateTime)
{
if (DateTime.UtcNow.Ticks == dateTime.Ticks)
{
return "Right now!";
}
bool isFuture = (DateTime.UtcNow.Ticks < dateTime.Ticks);
var ts = DateTime.UtcNow.Ticks < dateTime.Ticks ? new TimeSpan(dateTime.Ticks - DateTime.UtcNow.Ticks) : new TimeSpan(DateTime.UtcNow.Ticks - dateTime.Ticks);
double delta = ts.TotalSeconds;
if (delta < 1 * MINUTE)
{
return isFuture ? "in " + (ts.Seconds == 1 ? "one second" : ts.Seconds + " seconds") : ts.Seconds == 1 ? "one second ago" : ts.Seconds + " seconds ago";
}
if (delta < 2 * MINUTE)
{
return isFuture ? "in a minute" : "a minute ago";
}
if (delta < 45 * MINUTE)
{
return isFuture ? "in " + ts.Minutes + " minutes" : ts.Minutes + " minutes ago";
}
if (delta < 90 * MINUTE)
{
return isFuture ? "in an hour" : "an hour ago";
}
if (delta < 24 * HOUR)
{
return isFuture ? "in " + ts.Hours + " hours" : ts.Hours + " hours ago";
}
if (delta < 48 * HOUR)
{
return isFuture ? "tomorrow" : "yesterday";
}
if (delta < 30 * DAY)
{
return isFuture ? "in " + ts.Days + " days" : ts.Days + " days ago";
}
if (delta < 12 * MONTH)
{
int months = Convert.ToInt32(Math.Floor((double)ts.Days / 30));
return isFuture ? "in " + (months <= 1 ? "one month" : months + " months") : months <= 1 ? "one month ago" : months + " months ago";
}
else
{
int years = Convert.ToInt32(Math.Floor((double)ts.Days / 365));
return isFuture ? "in " + (years <= 1 ? "one year" : years + " years") : years <= 1 ? "one year ago" : years + " years ago";
}
}
}
Here a rewrite from Jeffs Script for PHP:
you can try this.I think it will work correctly.
Java for client-side gwt usage:
Here's the algorithm stackoverflow uses but rewritten more concisely in perlish pseudocode with a bug fix (no "one hours ago"). The function takes a (positive) number of seconds ago and returns a human-friendly string like "3 hours ago" or "yesterday".
http://refactormycode.com/codes/493-twitter-esque-relative-dates
C# 6 version:
A couple of years late to the party, but I had a requirement to do this for both past and future dates, so I combined Jeff's and Vincent's into this. It's a ternarytastic extravaganza! :)