Le samedi 23 mai 2020 16:41:04 UTC+2, Toby Such a écrit :
>
> Maybe the logic for calculating the time before formatting could be taken
> out of the function? That way it would be far easier to implement your own
> custom versions of the function without copying and pasting, and makes the
>
I see your point but its tricky to know where you draw the line. Where do
months stand? That answer will change depending on the project
requirements. I wonder if there is a way of changing how the "time_strings"
parameter works to control the depth more granularly but this does put a
higher
+1 There are lots of subtleties for how it can behave, and I have written
my own when I want specific behaviour. Other times I want something quick,
and I've used timesince, and usually just put up with the fact that it's a
bit longer than I want. Having that control would make it a lot more
The same could be said for "1 day, 23 hours" vs "1 day".
The way I implemented it in a former project was to only switch to days
after 48 hours, and/or only switch to years after 24 months etc.
Best regards,
Matthias
On Sat, May 23, 2020 at 12:00 PM Tom Forbes wrote:
> I like this idea.
I like this idea. However while `depth=1` makes sense for shorter time periods
where the difference between `4 hours` and `4 hours and 3 minutes ago` is not
required to be displayed, when you get a value that is over a year ago it loses
a lot of granularity. The difference between `1 year` and
+1
I belive I’ve copy-paste-modified timesince in a past project to implement
“depth=1”
On Sat, 23 May 2020 at 10:04, Tobias Kunze wrote:
> On 20-05-22 19:02:02, Toby Such wrote:
> >Looks like other people seemed to have the same idea as me for a little
> >fix, seems to me like it should be
On 20-05-22 19:02:02, Toby Such wrote:
>Looks like other people seemed to have the same idea as me for a little
>fix, seems to me like it should be part of core Django. And yes I do admit
>its a small thing but if it was actually useful some more people might use
>it?
Sounds good to me,
Looks like other people seemed to have the same idea as me for a little
fix, seems to me like it should be part of core Django. And yes I do admit
its a small thing but if it was actually useful some more people might use
it?
On Friday, 22 May 2020 23:21:16 UTC+1, Uri wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> On
Hi,
On Sat, May 23, 2020 at 12:39 AM Toby Such wrote:
> Hi all!
>
> I've been a little frustrated with the timesince filter that comes with
> default Django. By default it always comes with 2 parts e.g. 4 hours and 3
> minutes ago but I would much rather have just the 4 hours. In my own
>
Hi all!
I've been a little frustrated with the timesince filter that comes with
default Django. By default it always comes with 2 parts e.g. 4 hours and 3
minutes ago but I would much rather have just the 4 hours. In my own
projects I've simply created my own version of the timesince filter
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