A set of Django template filters useful for adding a “human touch” to data.
To activate these filters, add 'django.contrib.humanize'
to your INSTALLED_APPS
setting. Once you’ve done that, use {% load humanize %}
in a template, and you’ll have access to the following filters.
apnumber
For numbers 1-9, returns the number spelled out. Otherwise, returns the number. This follows Associated Press style.
Examples:
1
becomes one
.2
becomes two
.10
becomes 10
.You can pass in either an integer or a string representation of an integer.
intcomma
Converts an integer or float (or a string representation of either) to a string containing commas every three digits.
Examples:
4500
becomes 4,500
.4500.2
becomes 4,500.2
.45000
becomes 45,000
.450000
becomes 450,000
.4500000
becomes 4,500,000
.Format localization will be respected if enabled, e.g. with the 'de'
language:
45000
becomes '45.000'
.450000
becomes '450.000'
.intword
Converts a large integer (or a string representation of an integer) to a friendly text representation. Translates 1.0
as a singular phrase and all other numeric values as plural, this may be incorrect for some languages. Works best for numbers over 1 million.
Examples:
1000000
becomes 1.0 million
.1200000
becomes 1.2 million
.1200000000
becomes 1.2 billion
.-1200000000
becomes -1.2 billion
.Values up to 10^100 (Googol) are supported.
Format localization will be respected if enabled, e.g. with the 'de'
language:
1000000
becomes '1,0 Million'
.1200000
becomes '1,2 Millionen'
.1200000000
becomes '1,2 Milliarden'
.-1200000000
becomes '-1,2 Milliarden'
.Support for negative integers was added.
naturalday
For dates that are the current day or within one day, return “today”, “tomorrow” or “yesterday”, as appropriate. Otherwise, format the date using the passed in format string.
Argument: Date formatting string as described in the date
tag.
Examples (when ‘today’ is 17 Feb 2007):
16 Feb 2007
becomes yesterday
.17 Feb 2007
becomes today
.18 Feb 2007
becomes tomorrow
.DATE_FORMAT
setting if no argument is given.naturaltime
For datetime values, returns a string representing how many seconds, minutes or hours ago it was – falling back to the timesince
format if the value is more than a day old. In case the datetime value is in the future the return value will automatically use an appropriate phrase.
Examples (when ‘now’ is 17 Feb 2007 16:30:00):
17 Feb 2007 16:30:00
becomes now
.17 Feb 2007 16:29:31
becomes 29 seconds ago
.17 Feb 2007 16:29:00
becomes a minute ago
.17 Feb 2007 16:25:35
becomes 4 minutes ago
.17 Feb 2007 15:30:29
becomes 59 minutes ago
.17 Feb 2007 15:30:01
becomes 59 minutes ago
.17 Feb 2007 15:30:00
becomes an hour ago
.17 Feb 2007 13:31:29
becomes 2 hours ago
.16 Feb 2007 13:31:29
becomes 1 day, 2 hours ago
.16 Feb 2007 13:30:01
becomes 1 day, 2 hours ago
.16 Feb 2007 13:30:00
becomes 1 day, 3 hours ago
.17 Feb 2007 16:30:30
becomes 30 seconds from now
.17 Feb 2007 16:30:29
becomes 29 seconds from now
.17 Feb 2007 16:31:00
becomes a minute from now
.17 Feb 2007 16:34:35
becomes 4 minutes from now
.17 Feb 2007 17:30:29
becomes an hour from now
.17 Feb 2007 18:31:29
becomes 2 hours from now
.18 Feb 2007 16:31:29
becomes 1 day from now
.26 Feb 2007 18:31:29
becomes 1 week, 2 days from now
.ordinal
Converts an integer to its ordinal as a string.
Examples:
1
becomes 1st
.2
becomes 2nd
.3
becomes 3rd
.You can pass in either an integer or a string representation of an integer.
© Django Software Foundation and individual contributors
Licensed under the BSD License.
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/ref/contrib/humanize/