Datasette plugin for rendering timestamps.
Install this plugin in the same environment as Datasette to enable this new functionality:
pip install datasette-render-timestamps
The plugin will then look out for integer numbers that are likely to be timestamps - anything that would be a number of seconds from 5 years ago to 5 years in the future.
These will then be rendered in a more readable format.
You can disable automatic column detection in favour of explicitly listing the columns that you would like to render using plugin configuration in a metadata.json
file.
Add a "datasette-render-timestamps"
configuration block and use a "columns"
key to list the columns you would like to treat as timestamp values:
{
"plugins": {
"datasette-render-timestamps": {
"columns": ["created", "updated"]
}
}
}
This will cause any created
or updated
columns in any table to be treated as timestamps and rendered.
Save this to metadata.json
and run datasette with the --metadata
flag to load this configuration:
datasette serve mydata.db --metadata metadata.json
To disable automatic timestamp detection entirely, you can use "columnns": []
.
This configuration block can be used at the top level, or it can be applied just to specific databases or tables. Here's how to apply it to just the entries
table in the news.db
database:
{
"databases": {
"news": {
"tables": {
"entries": {
"plugins": {
"datasette-render-timestamps": {
"columns": ["created", "updated"]
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
And here's how to apply it to every created
column in every table in the news.db
database:
{
"databases": {
"news": {
"plugins": {
"datasette-render-timestamps": {
"columns": ["created", "updated"]
}
}
}
}
}
The default format is %B %d, %Y - %H:%M:%S UTC
which renders for example: October 10, 2019 - 07:18:29 UTC
. If you want another format, the date format can be customized using plugin configuration. Any format string supported by strftime may be used. For example:
{
"plugins": {
"datasette-render-timestamps": {
"format": "%Y-%m-%d-%H:%M:%S"
}
}
}