Build your Unix Epoch Converter with AI in under 5 minutes
Build a Unix epoch / timestamp converter that turns timestamps into human dates and back — seconds, milliseconds, microseconds, or nanoseconds — with the live current epoch, ISO-8601 UTC, local time, and a relative 'x ago'. Everything runs in the browser.
Como funciona
Passo 1
Descreva a sua ideia
Escreva um prompt em texto simples descrevendo o que pretende.
Passo 2
A IA cria
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Passo 3
Implementar e lançar
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Por que criar com IA em vez de contratar um programador?
| FloopFloop | Programador tradicional | |
|---|---|---|
| Tempo até ao lançamento | Menos de 5 minutos | 2 a 8 semanas |
| Custo | A partir de 0 $ | 5.000 $ - 50.000 $+ |
| Manutenção | Incluída | Retainer contínuo |
What is a unix epoch & timestamp converter?
A Unix epoch converter turns a timestamp — the seconds-since-1970 number you find in logs, JSON payloads, and database rows — into a human-readable date, and back again. It's a daily lookup for developers: an API returns `created_at: 1700000000`, a log line is stamped `1700000000000`, a debugger shows a raw `Date.now()`, and you need to know *when* that actually was, in UTC and in your own timezone. The canonical tools — epochconverter.com, unixtimestamp.com, the date pickers in dev consoles — all do this, but the perennial trap is the unit: classic Unix time is in seconds (about 10 digits today), while JavaScript and Java use milliseconds (13 digits), and some systems use micro- or nanoseconds. A good converter detects the unit from the value's magnitude, shows the result in UTC and local time plus a relative 'x ago', and gives you the timestamp back in every unit so you can paste whichever your system expects.
Common features
- A live current-Unix-time readout (with a 'use now' shortcut)
- Timestamp → date and date → timestamp
- Auto-detect seconds / milliseconds / microseconds / nanoseconds
- Manual unit override for edge cases
- ISO-8601 UTC output
- Your local-timezone time
- A relative 'x ago / in x' readout
- The value in every unit, each with one-click copy
- Everything client-side — nothing uploaded
- Light and dark themes; last input remembered
Real-world examples
Decoding an API timestamp
A developer pastes `created_at: 1700000000` from a JSON response and instantly sees it's 14 Nov 2023, 22:13 UTC — and what that is in their local time.
Telling seconds from milliseconds
Someone has a 13-digit number from a log and isn't sure of the unit; the converter auto-detects milliseconds and shows the right date instead of a year in the distant future.
Grabbing 'now' for a test
A developer needs the current epoch in milliseconds for a fixture, copies it from the live clock in one click, and pastes it into their test.
Why FloopFloop fits unix epoch & timestamp converter projects
An epoch converter is the kind of tool you reach for ten times a day, so it should be instant, ad-free, and yours. FloopFloop ships the converter you want — the units you use, your team's timezone, the formats your stack expects — on your own domain, with every conversion running in the browser. The 'timestamp console' that ships by default keeps a live clock ticking and shows the value every way at once, and the whole thing is one prompt away from being whatever fits your workflow.
Experimente estes prompts
Copie qualquer prompt abaixo e cole-o no FloopFloop para começar.
Build a Unix epoch / timestamp converter. Show the live current Unix time at the top (updating every second) with a 'use now' button. Below it, one smart input that accepts a numeric epoch — auto-detecting seconds vs milliseconds vs microseconds vs nanoseconds from the magnitude, with a manual override — or a date string. From it, show the ISO-8601 UTC string, the local time, a relative 'x ago / in x', the day of the week, and the timestamp in every unit (s / ms / µs / ns) with one-click copy. Make it hydration-safe: render the deterministic ISO/unit values during SSR and gate the live clock, local time, and relative time on mount. Persist the input to localStorage. 100% client-side.
Create a tool like epochconverter.com / unixtimestamp.com: paste a Unix timestamp and see the human date in UTC and my local timezone, or paste a date and get the epoch. Auto-detect seconds vs milliseconds. Keep it fully in the browser.
Build a developer timestamp tool with a live epoch clock and a converter that handles seconds, milliseconds, and nanoseconds, shows ISO-8601, and copies any value. Add a dark console theme.
Build an epoch-to-date converter that's fast and ad-free — one box, instant results in every unit and format, and a relative-time readout so I can sanity-check a timestamp from a log.
Perguntas frequentes
What is a Unix timestamp?
Seconds or milliseconds — how does it know?
How is this different from epochconverter.com?
Does it show my local time as well as UTC?
Is anything uploaded?
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