countdown clock in rails 3 - javascript

I am developing a test engine web application. Users will be give some amount of time to answer questions. I want to create a countdown clock after which the test is finished. I'm using javascript right now but facing problems of refresh and back button in the browser.
Following is the javascript:
<script>
function countDown (count) {
if (count > 0) {
var hours = Math.floor(count/3600)
var minutes = Math.floor(count/60) - (hours*60)
var seconds = count - (minutes * 60) - (hours*3600)
var d = document.getElementById("countDiv");
d.innerHTML = hours + ":" + minutes + ":" + seconds;
else
document.location = "test_finished.html";
}
countDown(<%=#totaltime%>);
</script>
How can i disable the refresh and back button or some other workaround??

You cannot enforce such things using JavaScript.
One way would be to have records in the database which hold the test start date time in it, once a user starts a test the start time is set, upon loading the initial timer value is calculated using it, so you can have back and refresh working fine and the countdown timer always being accurate.

Related

jQuery timer stops if user is not using browser

I am trying to build a jQuery timer, but it stops when the browser is not focused or minimized. One of my thoughts is the code can use Ajax to pull data constantly from the server and update the timer, but my concern is that it may increase the pressure of the server. I wonder is there any way to check if user is using browser at frontend, so the code only needs to send Ajax request once the user returns.
My jQuery timer code snippet.
(function timer (offset) {
setTimeout(function () {
var timestamp = {{ time }};
timestamp = 5 * 60 - timestamp - offset;
var minutes = Math.floor(timestamp / 60);
var seconds = Math.floor(timestamp % 60);
document.getElementById("timer").innerHTML = minutes + " : " + seconds;
timer(offset + 0.5);
}, 500);
})(0);
window.setTimeout's delay parameter is the minimum amount of time before the callback runs, not a guaranteed time. Instead of keeping a running total of time elapsed in the timeout, store the time the timer started and compare it to the current time. Performance.now() will give you an accurate timestamp measured in milliseconds.

display timer for every page starting from(00sec) in javascript

I created a quiz application using PHP. In that application I display one question per page. When user clicks on the next button, it displays the next question, one chosen randomly from database. So for that I want to display time.
But my problem is:
I want to display a timer from starting only seconds. When user clicks on the next button, first question timer is going to be stored in database and the timer will start(from 00:00) for the second question.
I tried a lot, but I don't have any idea how to do this.
It is better to use window.setInterval() in order for the timer to not rely on the system time. .setInterval will fire every n milliseconds. You can just increment using that
You can have:
var secondsCounter = 0;
function quizTimer(){
secondsCounter++;
}
window.setInterval(quizTimer, 1000);
Then you can display the time easily by using
myTimerElement.innerHTML = "Seconds Passed: " + secondsCounter;
Now you just have to do a little tweaking to make it appear in time format MM:SS
it could be
myTimerElement.innerHTML = minutesCounter + " : " + secondsCounter;
now just do some formatting methods or conditions to make the counter variables display two digits.
EDIT:
Check this snippet:
var secondsCounter = 0;
var startTime;
function restartTimer(){
secondsCounter = 0;
window.clearInterval(startTime);
startTime = window.setInterval(quizTimer, 1000);
}
function quizTimer(){
secondsCounter++;
document.getElementById('timer').innerHTML = "Seconds Passed: " + secondsCounter;
}
document.getElementById('btnsub').addEventListener('click', restartTimer);
<span id='timer'></span>
<button id='btnsub'>Submit</button>

javascript - time counter since start date and time

I have a new business, where I just hired someone to work for me, I am trying to make it easy for her to track her time, so I created a clock in button, that creates a record in a database, I have it pop up a small window, that she can click to clockout when she is done working.
I want it to show her on that popup window a counter that will show how long she has been working, so I want to create a javascript or jQuery that will start at a certain time and count from there. She is on the East Coast, our company is in the Central Timezone, so 1 hour behind her.
How can I get a javascript to start from a certain time and keep updating the timer, so she can see something like this:
[You've been working for: 01:01:01 HH::MM::SS] - and it is actively updating, climbing up.
All the timers I've found are not about time itself, but about starting at a time and counting down, or starting at 0 and counting up.
Is there a way to tell it a start time, so that way if she reloads the page, it does not start from 0, but will start at the time she clocked in, then add the time since and start from there?
I know it can be done, but I'm more of a Perl guy than a Javascript guy. I'm doing this on Wordpress, so I could use PHP and just tell her to refresh the page to see the current amount of time and then have it on page load show the current amount of time, but I think having a counter would be better and make it easier for her.
is there some code already done that I could modify myself to make it work? I cannot find any, anywhere. I'm willing to do all the work, I'm not asking for someone to do it for me.
I found this example someone did:
function get_uptime() {
var t1 = new Date()
var t2 = new Date()
var dif = t1.getTime() - t2.getTime()
seconds = dif / 1000;
Seconds_Between_Dates = Math.abs(seconds);
document.getElementById("seconds").innerHTML = Seconds_Between_Dates;
setTimeout(get_uptime, 1000);
}
get_uptime();
That is sort of it, but I don't now how to put the first time in t1, what format do I put it in?
I can have PHP put it in any format, but not sure the one it needs.
Plus this appears to only put the seconds, not hours, minutes and seconds.
Is there away to do that?
Thanks,
Richard
From your question I understand you store the date and time on start?
So then you can use PHP to echo this information in a starting Date object and let a setInterval-function do the current timegetting and calculation of the time working.
See working example here: http://jsfiddle.net/c0rxkhyz/1/
This is the code:
var startDateTime = new Date(2014,0,1,23,59,59,0); // YYYY (M-1) D H m s ms (start time and date from DB)
var startStamp = startDateTime.getTime();
var newDate = new Date();
var newStamp = newDate.getTime();
var timer; // for storing the interval (to stop or pause later if needed)
function updateClock() {
newDate = new Date();
newStamp = newDate.getTime();
var diff = Math.round((newStamp-startStamp)/1000);
var d = Math.floor(diff/(24*60*60)); /* though I hope she won't be working for consecutive days :) */
diff = diff-(d*24*60*60);
var h = Math.floor(diff/(60*60));
diff = diff-(h*60*60);
var m = Math.floor(diff/(60));
diff = diff-(m*60);
var s = diff;
document.getElementById("time-elapsed").innerHTML = d+" day(s), "+h+" hour(s), "+m+" minute(s), "+s+" second(s) working";
}
timer = setInterval(updateClock, 1000);
<div id="time-elapsed"></div>
Attention! The month number in the new Date() declaration is minus one (so January is 0, Feb 1, etc)!
I would use momentJS fromNow function.
You can get the time started as variable on page load then call fromNow on that and current time to get time between the two every time the clock is clicked:
var StartedWorkDateTime = GetStartedTime();
moment(StartedWorkDateTime).fromNow(true);
Non momentJS:
var date1 = new Date("7/11/2010 15:00");
var date2 = new Date("7/11/2010 18:00");
var timeDiff = Math.abs(date2.getTime() - date1.getTime());
var diffHours = Math.ceil(timeDiff / (1000 * 3600));
alert(diffHours);
reference
Get the difference between two dates by subtracting them:
var duration = end - start;
This will give you the number of milliseconds between the dates. You can use the milliseconds to figure out hours, minutes, and seconds. Then it's just a matter of string manipulation and writing the value to the page. To update the timer once per second, use setInterval():
setInterval(writeDuration, 1000);

Run JS function every new minute

So I've got this JavaScript clock I'm working on and I want it to be perfectly synced with the clients' system clock. I know how to get the current time using a Date object and I know how to run the update function every 60000 milliseconds (1 minute). The thing is that the client might load the page when half a minute has already passed, making the clock lag behind with 30 seconds. Is there any way to just run the update function when the minute-variable actually changes? (I only want minute-precision.)
How I get the current time:
var time = new Date();
var currentHour = time.getHours();
var currentMinute = time.getMinutes();
How I run the update function every 60000 ms:
setInterval(update,60000); //"update" is the function that is run
When the user logs in, get the current time and seconds of the minute, subtract 60 to get the remaining seconds, then multiply to set the timer
var time = new Date(),
secondsRemaining = (60 - time.getSeconds()) * 1000;
setTimeout(function() {
setInterval(update, 60000);
}, secondsRemaining);
First, you have to understand that timers in javascript are not guaranteed to be called on time so therefore you cannot be perfectly synced at all times - javascript just isn't a real-time language like that. It is single threaded so a timer event has to wait for other javascript that might be executing at the time to finish before a timer can be executed. So, you must have a design that still does as best as possible even if the timer is delayed (called later than it's supposed to be).
If you wanted to try to stay as close to aligned and do the fewest screen updates and be the most friendly to mobile battery life, I'd suggest this self-aligning code which realigns itself on each tick based on the time remaining until the next minute change:
function runClock() {
var now = new Date();
var timeToNextTick = (60 - now.getSeconds()) * 1000 - now.getMilliseconds();
setTimeout(function() {
update();
runClock();
}, timeToNextTick);
}
// display the initial clock
update();
// start the running clock display that will update right on the minute change
runClock();
This has the advantage that it only calls the update once on the next minute boundary.
Working demo: http://jsfiddle.net/jfriend00/u7Hc5/
var time = new Date();
var currentHour = time.getHours();
var currentMinute = time.getMinutes();
var currentSecond = time.getSeconds();
var updateinterval = setInterval(startTimer,(60-currentSecond)*1000);
function startTimer(){
clearInterval(updateinterval);
setInterval(update,60000);
}
function update(){
var time = new Date();
console.log(time.getSeconds());
}
I would set an interval to run each second, then check if time.getSeconds() == 0. This way you could execute an action whenever a new minute starts, based on the client time.

Create a scheduled Greasemonkey script

I need to create a special kind of script.
I want to show a message at certain times of the day. I've tested the code in Firebug Console and it works. The code is:
//Getting the hour minute and seconds of current time
var nowHours = new Date().getHours() + '';
var nowMinutes = new Date().getMinutes() + '';
var nowSeconds = new Date().getSeconds() + '';
var this_event = nowHours + nowMinutes + nowSeconds;
//172735 = 4PM 25 Minutes 30 Seconds. Just checked if now is the time
if (this_event == "162530") {
window.alert("Its Time!");
}
I feel that the Script is not running every second. For this to work effectively, the script has to be able to check the hour minutes and second "Every Second". I'm not worried about the performance, I just have to be accurate about the timing (to the second).
How do I do this?
Of course the script isn't running each second, GM-scripts run once when the document has been loaded.
Calculate the difference between the current time and the target-time and use a timeout based on the difference:
var now=new Date(),
then=new Date(),
diff;
then.setHours(16);
then.setMinutes(15);
then.setSeconds(30);
diff=then.getTime()-now.getTime();
//when time already has been reached
if(diff<=0){
window.alert('you\'re late');
}
//start a timer
else{
window.setTimeout(function(){window.alert('it\'s time');},diff);
}
Javascript doesn't guarantee your timeouts and other such events fire exactly on-time.
You should compare two Date objects using >= and remove the timeout or what ever other method you're using for tracking the time inside the matching if (and then reset it if necessary).
For more details see: https://stackoverflow.com/a/19252674/1470607
Alternatively you can use string comparison (but with caveats): https://stackoverflow.com/a/6212411/1470607

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