I was spending lot of time for the answer of my question, but I've nothing found.
How can I display the time format in 'hours:minutes:seconds', ex.: 20:30:12? I've tried to change the locale from >time: 开发者_StackOverflow"%H:%M"< to >time: "%H:%M:%S"< because I saw that %S is for seconds, but there is no effect :(
What I've done wrong?
Thanks for answers!
Time.now.strftime("%H:%M:%S")
Use Time#strftime method
In your case:
t = Time.now
t.strftime("%H:%M:%S") #=> "12:09:34"
The different formats:
%a - The abbreviated weekday name (``Sun'')
%A - The full weekday name (``Sunday'')
%b - The abbreviated month name (``Jan'')
%B - The full month name (``January'')
%c - The preferred local date and time representation
%d - Day of the month (01..31)
%H - Hour of the day, 24-hour clock (00..23)
%I - Hour of the day, 12-hour clock (01..12)
%j - Day of the year (001..366)
%m - Month of the year (01..12)
%M - Minute of the hour (00..59)
%p - Meridian indicator (``AM'' or ``PM'')
%S - Second of the minute (00..60)
%U - Week number of the current year,
starting with the first Sunday as the first
day of the first week (00..53)
%W - Week number of the current year,
starting with the first Monday as the first
day of the first week (00..53)
%w - Day of the week (Sunday is 0, 0..6)
%x - Preferred representation for the date alone, no time
%X - Preferred representation for the time alone, no date
%y - Year without a century (00..99)
%Y - Year with century
%Z - Time zone name
%% - Literal ``%'' character
And then you can create formats like that:
t = Time.now
t.strftime("Printed on %m/%d/%Y") #=> "Printed on 04/09/2003"
t.strftime("at %I:%M%p") #=> "at 08:56AM"
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