An alternative to ms library in the type world: exposes a Ms utility type which for a string in ms time format produces a number of milliseconds as a type.
import {type Ms, ms} from 'ms-ts';
const duration: Ms<'42ms'> = 42;
const duration: Ms<'42s'> = 42_000;
// Error: "Type '43000' is not assignable to type '42000'."
const duration: Ms<'42s'> = 43_000;
const config = {
  // In expressions, use `satisfies` and *never* `as`:
  duration1: 2_520_000 satisfies Ms<'42m'>,
  duration2: 271_296_000 satisfies Ms<'3.14d'>,
  // Or `ms` identity function:
  duration3: ms<Ms<'-3.14d'>>(-271_296_000),
};For npm, yarn & pnpm users respectively:
npm i ms-ts
yarn add ms-ts
pnpm i ms-tsMinimum supported Node.js version is 14.
- Supported units:
ms,msec(s),millisecond(s)s,sec(s),second(s)m,min(s),minute(s)h,hr(s),hour(s)d,day(s)w,week(s)y,yr(s),year(s)(365.25 days, as in the original implementation)
 - Supports negative & floating point numbers.
 - Ignores whitespaces in the beginnig and end of the input string and between the number and the unit.
 - Ignores leading zeroes.
 - If parsing fails, returns 
neveras the result. - It does not performs an inverse conversion (number of milliseconds to a string with a unit).
 - Check more usage examples in 
test-ddirectory of the repository. 
When assigning the number of milliseconds, just declare the type after a variable name:
const duration: Ms<'42s'> = 42_000;For type-checking to work in expressions, always use satisfies operator (TypeScript >= 4.9) and never use as:
const config = {
  duration1: 2_520_000 satisfies Ms<'42m'>, // ✅ Always use `satisfies` in expresions to assert a type
  duration2: 1 as Ms<'42m'>, // ❌ Avoid using `as`! No error!
};You may also use an exported identity function1 ms and pass the time string as a generic parameter:
import {Ms, ms} from 'ms-ts';
const config = {
  duration1: ms<'42m'>(2_520_000), // Forces you to pass `2_520_000`
};1 An identity function is a function that returns its first argument as does nothing else: fn = (v) => v.