I'm running elm-repl to play around with the language.
I'd like to see what the current time is. How would I do that? It doesn't appear to be possible with the current library. Why is that?
EDIT: I made a package to help with this. http://package.elm-lang.org/packages/z5h/time-app
This was asked around elm 0.15 - things are different in elm 0.17 & 0.18: see How do I get the current time in Elm 0.17/0.18?
Update for 0.19 It is not possible to get the current time using the standard library.. You need to use elm/time. As with 0.18, all you need is a command and Msg to handle the result
type Msg
= OnTime Time.Posix
getTime : Cmd Msg
getTime =
Task.perform OnTime Time.now
Update for 0.18 This has got simpler again. Now all you need is a command and Msg to handle the result
type Msg
= OnTime Time
getTime : Cmd Msg
getTime =
Task.perform OnTime Time.now
See this Ellie
Original answer
With 0.17, this got a whole lot easier. There is now a Task in the Time library. So for example, we now have:
Time.now
|> Task.Perform NoOp CurrentTime
You can use the Time package and/or the Date package.
Here's a contrived example which uses both:
import Signal
import Time exposing (every, second)
import Date exposing (year, hour, minute, second, fromTime)
import Graphics.Element exposing (show)
main =
Signal.map currentTime (Time.every Time.second)
currentTime t =
let date' = fromTime t
hour' = toString (Date.hour date')
minute' = toString (Date.minute date')
second' = toString (Date.second date')
year' = toString (year date')
now = "The current time is: " ++ hour' ++ ":" ++ minute' ++ ":" ++ second'
in
show now
To resolve my own question, I've created a variant of StartApp that includes a timestamp on each action.
So the update function has signature:update : action -> Time -> model -> (model, Effects action)
The Gist is here. https://gist.github.com/z5h/41ca436679591b6c3e51
Elm 0.19
Below I set inital time as unix time start Time.millisToPosix 0, but you can set it to Nothing and later to Just time or pass it with Flag.
module Main exposing (main)
import Browser
import Html exposing (Html)
import Task
import Time exposing (Posix)
main : Program () Model Msg
main =
Browser.element
{ init = \_ -> init
, view = view
, update = update
, subscriptions = \_ -> Sub.none
}
-- MODEL
type alias Model =
{ zone : Time.Zone
, now : Posix
}
init : ( Model, Cmd Msg )
init =
( Model Time.utc (Time.millisToPosix 0), Task.perform Zone Time.here )
-- UPDATE
type Msg
= Zone Time.Zone
| Now Posix
update : Msg -> Model -> ( Model, Cmd Msg )
update msg model =
case msg of
Zone zone ->
( { model | zone = zone }, Task.perform Now Time.now )
Now now ->
( { model | now = now }, Cmd.none )
-- VIEW
formatTime zone posix =
(String.padLeft 2 '0' <| String.fromInt <| Time.toHour zone posix)
++ ":"
++ (String.padLeft 2 '0' <| String.fromInt <| Time.toMinute zone posix)
++ ":"
++ (String.padLeft 2 '0' <| String.fromInt <| Time.toSecond zone posix)
view : Model -> Html Msg
view model =
Html.div []
[ Html.text <| formatTime model.zone model.now
]
If you want the time as of program start you can do the following:
Now.elm
module Now where
import Native.Now
loadTime : Float
loadTime = Native.Now.loadTime
Native/Now.js
Elm.Native.Now = {};
Elm.Native.Now.make = function(localRuntime) {
localRuntime.Native = localRuntime.Native || {};
localRuntime.Native.Now = localRuntime.Native.Now || {};
if (localRuntime.Native.Now.values) {
return localRuntime.Native.Now.values;
}
var Result = Elm.Result.make(localRuntime);
return localRuntime.Native.Now.values = {
loadTime: (new window.Date).getTime()
};
};
your code
programStart = Now.loadTime
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