# Go String To Duration (go-str2duration) This package allows to get a time.Duration from a string. The string can be a string retorned for time.Duration or a similar string with weeks or days too!. Go Report Card go.dev ## Download ```bash go get github.com/xhit/go-str2duration/v2 ``` ## Features Go String To Duration supports this strings conversions to duration: - All strings returned in time.Duration String. - A string more readable like 1w2d6h3ns (1 week 2 days 6 hours and 3 nanoseconds). - `µs` and `us` are microsecond. It's the same `time.ParseDuration` standard function in Go, but with days and week support. **Note**: a day is 24 hour. If you don't need days and weeks, use [`time.ParseDuration`](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration). ## Usage ```go package main import ( "fmt" str2duration "github.com/xhit/go-str2duration/v2" "os" "time" ) func main() { for i, tt := range []struct { dur string expected time.Duration }{ //This times are returned with time.Duration string {"1h", time.Duration(time.Hour)}, {"1m", time.Duration(time.Minute)}, {"1s", time.Duration(time.Second)}, {"1ms", time.Duration(time.Millisecond)}, {"1µs", time.Duration(time.Microsecond)}, {"1us", time.Duration(time.Microsecond)}, {"1ns", time.Duration(time.Nanosecond)}, {"4.000000001s", time.Duration(4*time.Second + time.Nanosecond)}, {"1h0m4.000000001s", time.Duration(time.Hour + 4*time.Second + time.Nanosecond)}, {"1h1m0.01s", time.Duration(61*time.Minute + 10*time.Millisecond)}, {"1h1m0.123456789s", time.Duration(61*time.Minute + 123456789*time.Nanosecond)}, {"1.00002ms", time.Duration(time.Millisecond + 20*time.Nanosecond)}, {"1.00000002s", time.Duration(time.Second + 20*time.Nanosecond)}, {"693ns", time.Duration(693 * time.Nanosecond)}, //This times aren't returned with time.Duration string, but are easily readable and can be parsed too! {"1ms1ns", time.Duration(time.Millisecond + 1*time.Nanosecond)}, {"1s20ns", time.Duration(time.Second + 20*time.Nanosecond)}, {"60h8ms", time.Duration(60*time.Hour + 8*time.Millisecond)}, {"96h63s", time.Duration(96*time.Hour + 63*time.Second)}, //And works with days and weeks! {"2d3s96ns", time.Duration(48*time.Hour + 3*time.Second + 96*time.Nanosecond)}, {"1w2d3s96ns", time.Duration(168*time.Hour + 48*time.Hour + 3*time.Second + 96*time.Nanosecond)}, {"10s1us693ns", time.Duration(10*time.Second + time.Microsecond + 693*time.Nanosecond)}, } { durationFromString, err := str2duration.ParseDuration(tt.dur) if err != nil { panic(err) //Check if expected time is the time returned by the parser } else if tt.expected != durationFromString { fmt.Println(fmt.Sprintf("index %d -> in: %s returned: %s\tnot equal to %s", i, tt.dur, durationFromString.String(), tt.expected.String())) }else{ fmt.Println(fmt.Sprintf("index %d -> in: %s parsed succesfully", i, tt.dur)) } } } ``` Also, you can convert to string the duration using `String(t time.Duration)` function. This support weeks and days and not return the ugly decimals from golang standard `t.String()` function. Units with 0 values aren't returned. For example: `1d1ms` means 1 day 1 millisecond.