How to calculate elapsed time from now with Joda-Time? How to calculate elapsed time from now with Joda-Time? java java

How to calculate elapsed time from now with Joda-Time?


To calculate the elapsed time with JodaTime, use Period. To format the elapsed time in the desired human representation, use PeriodFormatter which you can build by PeriodFormatterBuilder.

Here's a kickoff example:

DateTime myBirthDate = new DateTime(1978, 3, 26, 12, 35, 0, 0);DateTime now = new DateTime();Period period = new Period(myBirthDate, now);PeriodFormatter formatter = new PeriodFormatterBuilder()    .appendSeconds().appendSuffix(" seconds ago\n")    .appendMinutes().appendSuffix(" minutes ago\n")    .appendHours().appendSuffix(" hours ago\n")    .appendDays().appendSuffix(" days ago\n")    .appendWeeks().appendSuffix(" weeks ago\n")    .appendMonths().appendSuffix(" months ago\n")    .appendYears().appendSuffix(" years ago\n")    .printZeroNever()    .toFormatter();String elapsed = formatter.print(period);System.out.println(elapsed);

This prints by now

3 seconds ago51 minutes ago7 hours ago6 days ago10 months ago31 years ago

(Cough, old, cough) You see that I've taken months and years into account as well and configured it to omit the values when those are zero.


Use PrettyTime for Simple Elapsed Time.

I tried HumanTime as @sfussenegger answered and using JodaTime's Period but the easiest and cleanest method for human readable elapsed time that I found was the PrettyTime library.

Here's a couple of simple examples with input and output:

Five Minutes Ago

DateTime fiveMinutesAgo = DateTime.now().minusMinutes( 5 );new PrettyTime().format( fiveMinutesAgo.toDate() );// Outputs: "5 minutes ago"

Awhile Ago

DateTime birthday = new DateTime(1978, 3, 26, 12, 35, 0, 0);new PrettyTime().format( birthday.toDate() );// Outputs: "4 decades ago"

CAUTION: I've tried playing around with the library's more precise functionality, but it produces some odd results so use it with care and in non-life threatening projects.

JP


You can do this with a PeriodFormatter but you don't have to go to the effort of making your own PeriodFormatBuilder as in other answers. If it suits your case, you can just use the default formatter:

Period period = new Period(startDate, endDate);System.out.println(PeriodFormat.getDefault().print(period))

(hat tip to this answer on a similar question, I'm cross-posting for discoverability)