I'm just having a look at ruby and was playing with the date/time thing.
irb(main):001:0> jamis_DOB = Time.mktime(2003, 10, 22, 06, 59)
=> Wed Oct 22 06:59:00 +0300 2003
irb(main):002:0> age = Time.now - jamis_DOB
=> 222934108.172989
irb(main):005:0> age_in_years = (((age / 3600) / 24) / 365).to_i
=> 7
So my example is not so good as age_in_years won't know if there are leap years as those years add up. I've been through some googled time/date tutorials and haven't found an easy way to just subtract two dates and have it return in a years, months, days etc... format. I'm guessing ruby has an add-on or something built-in for this kind of thing. Could someone tell me what it is? (Also, any advice how to find the answers to this type of thing for future reference?)
Thanks.
You want Date
instead of Time
:
require 'date'
now = Date.today
before = Date.civil(2000, 1, 1)
difference_in_days = (now - before).to_i
(difference_in_days/365.25).to_i
Will give you the difference in years between today and January 1st 2000. It can probably be improved, I just used the average number of days per year (365.25), which will give you the right answer except in extreme edge cases.
You can also do something like this:
require 'date'
years = 0
d = Date.civil(2000, 1, 1)
loop do
d = d.next_year
break if Date.today < d
years += 1
end
But Date#next_year
was introduced in Ruby 1.9, so it wouldn't work in 1.8.7.
Of course, the easiest way of determining the number of years between two dates is just subtracting the numbers:
2010 - 2000 # => 10