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emojiclock

v1.2.2

Published

Returns an appropriate emoji clock for the current time

Downloads

5

Readme

🕒 emojiclock

Code Climate

A node package for giving you emoji clocks.

Installing emojiclock

npm install emojiclock --save
var emojiclock = require('emojiclock')

Using emojiclock

emojiclock returns a clock emoji in the form of a string.

emojiclock.now

Returns a clock emoji for the current hour:

var clock = emojiclock.now() // Let's pretend it's 18:37
console.log(clock + "  TICK TOCK: Something happened") // 🕕 TICK TOCK: Something happened

emojiclock.get(hour)

Returns a clock emoji for a given hour:

var clock = emojiclock.get(3) // 24hr support, i.e. 15 also works
console.log(clock + "  TICK TOCK: Something happened") // 🕒 TICK TOCK: Something happened

emojiclock.time(time)

Returns a clock emoji for a given timestamp or Date() object:

var time = new Date('January 23, 1985 20:23:23')
var clock = emojiclock.time(time)
console.log(clock + "  TICK TOCK: Something happened") // 🕗 TICK TOCK: Something happened

var time = 475359803
var clock = emojiclock.time(time)
console.log(clock + "  TICK TOCK: Something happened") // 🕗 TICK TOCK: Something happened

If using a Date() object it must be an actual object, not a string representation. A timestamp can be 10 or 13 characters long (seconds/milliseconds) and can be a string or a number.