Template:Age in years and days
Syntax
{{Age in years and days|yyyy|mm|dd}}
or{{Age in years and days|yyyy|mm|dd|yyyy2|mm2|dd2}}
Examples
{{Age in years and days|1989|07|23}}
returns " 35 years, 123 days"{{Age in years and days|1989|07|23|2003|07|24}}
returns " 14 years, 1 day"
Notes
This template does not check for incorrect input:
{{Age in years and days|1980|07|14|1993|06|233}}
returns " 12 years, 554 days" (surplus days do not count as extra months){{Age in years and days|1980|07|14|1993|88|14}}
returns " 13 years, 2,471 days" (surplus months do not count as extra years)
Also note that due to leap years, the measure "years and days" fails to be fully additive. The following example is not an error, but each calculation uses a different definition of "year", either 365 days or 366:
{{Age in years and days|2007|02|27|2008|03|02}}
returns " 1 year, 4 days"
but split up:
{{Age in years and days|2007|02|27|2007|03|02}}
returns " 0 years, 3 days"{{Age in years and days|2007|03|02|2008|03|02}}
returns " 1 year, 0 days"
Use with caution on in-universe pages
Please note that this template, and really everything in category:age calculation templates should be used with caution on in-universe pages. They all assume that there is no year zero, which our in-universe rule on years does not. This is because there are several in-universe sources, not the least of which is the 1996 movie and its novelisation, which assume that there is a year zero. For ease of calculation, our in-universe time calculation templates, like {{timeline}}, are therefore based on a different principle than this one — namely, that year 0 does exist.
In practice, this means absolutely nothing to the calculation time of between two dates, so long as you're trying to figure out the distance between any two dates after 1/1/1 AD.