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NAMETime::ElapsedVERSIONversion 0.33SYNOPSISuse Time::Elapsed qw( elapsed ); $t = 1868401; print elapsed( $t ); prints: 21 days, 15 hours and 1 second If you set the language to turkish: print elapsed( $t, 'TR' ); prints: 21 gün, 15 saat ve 1 saniye DESCRIPTIONThis module transforms the elapsed seconds into a human readable string. It can be used for (for example) rendering "uptime" values into a human readable form. The resulting string will be an approximation. See the "CAVEATS" section for more information.NAMETime::Elapsed - Displays the elapsed time as a human readable string.IMPORT PARAMETERSThis module does not export anything by default. You have to specify import parameters. ":all" key does not include "import commands".FUNCTIONSelapsed KEYS:all COMMANDSParameter Description --------- ----------- -compile All available language data will immediately be compiled and placed into an internal cache. FUNCTIONSelapsed SECONDS [, OPTIONS ]
OPTIONS lang The optional argument language id, represents the language to use when converting the data to a string. The language section is really a standalone module in the "Time::Elapsed::Lang::" namespace, so it is possible to extend the language support on your own. Currently supported languages are: Parameter Description --------- ----------------- EN English (default) TR Turkish DE German Language ids are case-insensitive. These are all same: "en", "EN", "eN". weeks If this option is present and set to a treu value, then you'll get "weeks" instead of "days" in the output if the output has a days value between 7 days and 28 days. CAVEATS
SEE ALSOPTools::Time::Elapsed, DateTime, DateTime::Format::Duration, Time::Duration.AUTHORBurak Gursoy <burak@cpan.org>COPYRIGHT AND LICENSEThis software is copyright (c) 2007 by Burak Gursoy.This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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