![]() | This module is rated as ready for general use. It has reached a mature form and is thought to be relatively bug-free and ready for use wherever appropriate. It is ready to mention on help pages and other Wikipedia resources as an option for new users to learn. To reduce server load and bad output, it should be improved by sandbox testing rather than repeated trial-and-error editing. |
![]() | This module is subject to page protection. It is a highly visible module in use by a very large number of pages, or is substituted very frequently. Because vandalism or mistakes would affect many pages, and even trivial editing might cause substantial load on the servers, it is protected from editing. |
![]() | This module depends on the following other modules: |
This module is a fancy way to call {{#time}} in Lua. Unlike #time
, it handles YMD dates (e.g. 2020 January 1) correctly via Module:YMD to ISO.
Syntax
From a template:
{{#invoke:Format date|main|<timestamp>|fmt=<Formatting string>}}
From a module:
require('Module:Format time')._main{<timestamp>, fmt = <Formatting string>}
In both cases, <timestamp> is any timestamp considered valid by {{#time}} plus YMD format. |fmt=
can be any format according to mw:Help:Extension:ParserFunctions##time, and defaults to j xg Y
, which renders dates like 28 June 2025.
local p = {}
function p.main(frame)
args = require('Module:Arguments').getArgs(frame)
return p._main{fmt = args['fmt'], s = args['s'] or args[1]}
end
function p._main(args)
-- args is a table with two values:
-- fmt = the format to output the time, according to [[:mw:Help:Extension:ParserFunctions##time]] (default: j xg Y)
-- s (or [1]) = the string to process; should be a date (default: empty string)
return mw.getCurrentFrame():callParserFunction('#time', {args.fmt or 'j xg Y', require('Module:YMD to ISO')._main(args.s or args[1])})
end
return p