I'm trying to convert a MM/DD/YYYY date to a long date. So for example, 02/16/2020 would convert to something like 16/02/2020.
Is there a way to make this date conversion accurately?
You need to specify the original format of the time, and then convert it to a new format.
const date = "02/16/2020";
alert(moment(date, "MM/DD/YYYY").format('DD/MM/YYYY'));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.24.0/moment.min.js"></script>
Use moment for date formatting:
Sample Code:
moment('02/16/2020').format('16/02/2020');
You can play with date by moment.js. It is very useful tool for javascript developer.
Momemet Js Document
For dynamic value:
moment(yourDate, 'MM/DD/YYYY').format('DD/MM/YYYY');
Here, yourDate is your dynamic value date.
check this. its work.
function formatDate(date) {
var d = new Date(date),
month = '' + (d.getMonth() + 1),
day = '' + d.getDate(),
year = d.getFullYear();
if (month.length < 2) month = '0' + month;
if (day.length < 2) day = '0' + day;
return [day,month,year].join('/');
}
document.getElementById('res').innerHTML = formatDate('02/16/2020') ;
<div id="res">res</div>
2 || 1 liners ?
var src = '02/16/2020'
var a = src.split('/');
console.log(a.concat(a.splice(0, 2)).join('/'));
console.log(src.replace(/(\d+)\/(\d+)\/(\d+)/, '$3/$1/$2'));
If you want a conversion just between the exact formats you have mentioned:
function dfConvert(f) {
var farr = f.split("/");
return `${farr[1]}/${farr[0]}/${farr[2]}`;
}
var input = "02/16/2020";
console.log(`input: ${input}`)
console.log(`output: ${dfConvert(input)}`);
If you want the actual date object and from that you want your mentioned format for some reason:
function toDate(f) {
var farr = f.split("/");
return new Date(parseInt(farr[2]), parseInt(farr[0])-1, parseInt(farr[1]))
}
function dfConvert(f) {
var d = toDate(f)
var day = d.getDate()
var month = (d.getMonth() + 1)
var year = d.getFullYear()
return `${((day.toString().length <= 1) ? "0": "")}${day}/${((month.toString().length <= 1) ? "0": "")}${month}/${year}`
}
var input = "02/16/2020"
console.log(`input: ${input}`)
console.log(`output: ${dfConvert(input)}`)
Hope it helps
I would like to know if there's a way to convert a timestamp to yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssXXX date format?
I can convert it to ISO using toISOString but it add Z at the end of the string.
Thank you.
var d = new Date();
var datestring = d.getDate() + "-" +
(d.getMonth() + 1) + "-" +
d.getFullYear() + "-T " +
d.getHours() + ":" +
d.getMinutes();
If you really do not want to use an external library like moment.js (which i would strongly recommend), as you stated in your comment, you will have to implement a function for that yourself, as regular javascript does not provide a function for this (as far as i know).
You can create an object of javascripts built-in Date class from a unix timestamp by using
var unixTimestamp = 1566394163;
//multiply with 1000 as Date expects milliseconds
var date = new Date(unixTimestamp * 1000);
Then you could build the output string yourself, by using something along this
var dateString = "";
dateString += date.getUTCFullYear()+"-";
dateString += date.getUTCMonth()+"-";
dateString += ...
On the other hand, if the Z at the end of the string is the only thing that bothers you about the format provided by toISOString() as a workaround you could use its output and remove the last character of it
var dateString = date.toISOString();
var newDateString = dateString.substr(0, dateString.length -1);
Please try using below code to convert timestamp to date format.
var date = new Date(timestamp*1000);
var year = date.getFullYear();
var month = months_arr[date.getMonth()];
var day = date.getDate();
var hours = date.getHours();
var minutes = "0" + date.getMinutes();
var seconds = "0" + date.getSeconds();
Display date time in any format you want.
In javascript, I'm getting the Date & Time as 1/05/2013 20:00 (d/mm/yyyy HH:MM)
But I want the date & time in this format 01/05/2013 20:00 (dd/mm/yyyy HH:MM)
jQuery doesn't offer any help with date/time formatting.
If you want something sophisticated without much hazzle, take date.js
However, if adding a "0" to the beginning of the date is everything you ever want, this will be enough:
var date = "1/05/2013 20:00";
function modifyDateAccordingToYourNeeds(date_in)
{
var day_part = date_in.split("/")[0];
if (day_part.length == 1)
date_in = "0" + date_in;
return date_in;
}
alert(modifyDateAccordingToYourNeeds(date));
However, be careful as this approach is very limited.
maybe use this
var curr_date = date.getDate();
var curr_month = date.getMonth();
var curr_year = date.getFullYear();
date= curr_date + '/'+ curr_month + '/'+ curr_year;
More possibilities
Javascript
var d = "1/05/2013 20:00";
function padDay(date) {
if (date.charAt(1) === "/") {
date = "0" + date;
}
return date;
}
console.log(padDay(d));
On jsfiddle
or with moments
Javascript
var d = "1/05/2013 20:00";
function padDay(date) {
return moment(d, "D/M/YYYY").format("DD/MM/YYYY");
}
console.log(padDay(d));
On jsfiddle
The Globalize library allows you to do both globalization and customization of dates easily. The following example is taken from the documentation page:
Globalize.format( new Date(1955,10,5), "dddd MMMM d, yyyy" ); // "Saturday November 5, 1955"
The globalize library also allows you to output dates in a format appropriate for the culture specified. It supports virtually all available cultures. Another example:
// assuming a culture with "/" as the date separator symbol
Globalize.format( new Date(1955,10,5), "yyyy/MM/dd" ); // "1955/11/05"
If you want to do any more globalization, the Globalize library also allows for number and currency globalization. I have created a small sample project that shows how to use this library for client-side globalization: https://github.com/ErikSchierboom/clientsideglobalization
Try this:
function changeFormat(string) {
var p = string; //"1/05/2013 20:00"
var n = /^[0-9]*/.exec(p)[0];
p = p.replace(n, "");
if (n.length == 1) {
n = "0" + n;
}
return n + p;
}
alert(changeFormat("1/05/2013 20:00"));
I'm trying to use JS to turn a date object into a string in YYYYMMDD format. Is there an easier way than concatenating Date.getYear(), Date.getMonth(), and Date.getDay()?
Altered piece of code I often use:
Date.prototype.yyyymmdd = function() {
var mm = this.getMonth() + 1; // getMonth() is zero-based
var dd = this.getDate();
return [this.getFullYear(),
(mm>9 ? '' : '0') + mm,
(dd>9 ? '' : '0') + dd
].join('');
};
var date = new Date();
date.yyyymmdd();
I didn't like adding to the prototype. An alternative would be:
var rightNow = new Date();
var res = rightNow.toISOString().slice(0,10).replace(/-/g,"");
<!-- Next line is for code snippet output only -->
document.body.innerHTML += res;
You can use the toISOString function :
var today = new Date();
today.toISOString().substring(0, 10);
It will give you a "yyyy-mm-dd" format.
Moment.js could be your friend
var date = new Date();
var formattedDate = moment(date).format('YYYYMMDD');
new Date('Jun 5 2016').
toLocaleString('en-us', {year: 'numeric', month: '2-digit', day: '2-digit'}).
replace(/(\d+)\/(\d+)\/(\d+)/, '$3-$1-$2');
// => '2016-06-05'
If you don't need a pure JS solution, you can use jQuery UI to do the job like this :
$.datepicker.formatDate('yymmdd', new Date());
I usually don't like to import too much libraries. But jQuery UI is so useful, you will probably use it somewhere else in your project.
Visit http://api.jqueryui.com/datepicker/ for more examples
This is a single line of code that you can use to create a YYYY-MM-DD string of today's date.
var d = new Date().toISOString().slice(0,10);
I don't like modifying native objects, and I think multiplication is clearer than the string padding the accepted solution.
function yyyymmdd(dateIn) {
var yyyy = dateIn.getFullYear();
var mm = dateIn.getMonth() + 1; // getMonth() is zero-based
var dd = dateIn.getDate();
return String(10000 * yyyy + 100 * mm + dd); // Leading zeros for mm and dd
}
var today = new Date();
console.log(yyyymmdd(today));
Fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/gbdarren/Ew7Y4/
In addition to o-o's answer I'd like to recommend separating logic operations from the return and put them as ternaries in the variables instead.
Also, use concat() to ensure safe concatenation of variables
Date.prototype.yyyymmdd = function() {
var yyyy = this.getFullYear();
var mm = this.getMonth() < 9 ? "0" + (this.getMonth() + 1) : (this.getMonth() + 1); // getMonth() is zero-based
var dd = this.getDate() < 10 ? "0" + this.getDate() : this.getDate();
return "".concat(yyyy).concat(mm).concat(dd);
};
Date.prototype.yyyymmddhhmm = function() {
var yyyymmdd = this.yyyymmdd();
var hh = this.getHours() < 10 ? "0" + this.getHours() : this.getHours();
var min = this.getMinutes() < 10 ? "0" + this.getMinutes() : this.getMinutes();
return "".concat(yyyymmdd).concat(hh).concat(min);
};
Date.prototype.yyyymmddhhmmss = function() {
var yyyymmddhhmm = this.yyyymmddhhmm();
var ss = this.getSeconds() < 10 ? "0" + this.getSeconds() : this.getSeconds();
return "".concat(yyyymmddhhmm).concat(ss);
};
var d = new Date();
document.getElementById("a").innerHTML = d.yyyymmdd();
document.getElementById("b").innerHTML = d.yyyymmddhhmm();
document.getElementById("c").innerHTML = d.yyyymmddhhmmss();
<div>
yyyymmdd: <span id="a"></span>
</div>
<div>
yyyymmddhhmm: <span id="b"></span>
</div>
<div>
yyyymmddhhmmss: <span id="c"></span>
</div>
Local time:
var date = new Date();
date = date.toJSON().slice(0, 10);
UTC time:
var date = new Date().toISOString();
date = date.substring(0, 10);
date will print 2020-06-15 today as i write this.
toISOString() method returns the date with the ISO standard which is YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ
The code takes the first 10 characters that we need for a YYYY-MM-DD format.
If you want format without '-' use:
var date = new Date();
date = date.toJSON().slice(0, 10).split`-`.join``;
In .join`` you can add space, dots or whatever you'd like.
Plain JS (ES5) solution without any possible date jump issues caused by Date.toISOString() printing in UTC:
var now = new Date();
var todayUTC = new Date(Date.UTC(now.getFullYear(), now.getMonth(), now.getDate()));
return todayUTC.toISOString().slice(0, 10).replace(/-/g, '');
This in response to #weberste's comment on #Pierre Guilbert's answer.
// UTC/GMT 0
document.write('UTC/GMT 0: ' + (new Date()).toISOString().slice(0, 19).replace(/[^0-9]/g, "")); // 20150812013509
// Client local time
document.write('<br/>Local time: ' + (new Date(Date.now()-(new Date()).getTimezoneOffset() * 60000)).toISOString().slice(0, 19).replace(/[^0-9]/g, "")); // 20150812113509
Another way is to use toLocaleDateString with a locale that has a big-endian date format standard, such as Sweden, Lithuania, Hungary, South Korea, ...:
date.toLocaleDateString('se')
To remove the delimiters (-) is just a matter of replacing the non-digits:
console.log( new Date().toLocaleDateString('se').replace(/\D/g, '') );
This does not have the potential error you can get with UTC date formats: the UTC date may be one day off compared to the date in the local time zone.
var someDate = new Date();
var dateFormated = someDate.toISOString().substr(0,10);
console.log(dateFormated);
dateformat is a very used package.
How to use:
Download and install dateformat from NPM. Require it in your module:
const dateFormat = require('dateformat');
and then just format your stuff:
const myYYYYmmddDate = dateformat(new Date(), 'yyyy-mm-dd');
Shortest
.toJSON().slice(0,10).split`-`.join``;
let d = new Date();
let s = d.toJSON().slice(0,10).split`-`.join``;
console.log(s);
Working from #o-o's answer this will give you back the string of the date according to a format string. You can easily add a 2 digit year regex for the year & milliseconds and the such if you need them.
Date.prototype.getFromFormat = function(format) {
var yyyy = this.getFullYear().toString();
format = format.replace(/yyyy/g, yyyy)
var mm = (this.getMonth()+1).toString();
format = format.replace(/mm/g, (mm[1]?mm:"0"+mm[0]));
var dd = this.getDate().toString();
format = format.replace(/dd/g, (dd[1]?dd:"0"+dd[0]));
var hh = this.getHours().toString();
format = format.replace(/hh/g, (hh[1]?hh:"0"+hh[0]));
var ii = this.getMinutes().toString();
format = format.replace(/ii/g, (ii[1]?ii:"0"+ii[0]));
var ss = this.getSeconds().toString();
format = format.replace(/ss/g, (ss[1]?ss:"0"+ss[0]));
return format;
};
d = new Date();
var date = d.getFromFormat('yyyy-mm-dd hh:ii:ss');
alert(date);
I don't know how efficient that is however, especially perf wise because it uses a lot of regex. It could probably use some work I do not master pure js.
NB: I've kept the predefined class definition but you might wanna put that in a function or a custom class as per best practices.
A little variation for the accepted answer:
function getDate_yyyymmdd() {
const date = new Date();
const yyyy = date.getFullYear();
const mm = String(date.getMonth() + 1).padStart(2,'0');
const dd = String(date.getDate()).padStart(2,'0');
return `${yyyy}${mm}${dd}`
}
console.log(getDate_yyyymmdd())
This guy here => http://blog.stevenlevithan.com/archives/date-time-format wrote a format() function for the Javascript's Date object, so it can be used with familiar literal formats.
If you need full featured Date formatting in your app's Javascript, use it. Otherwise if what you want to do is a one off, then concatenating getYear(), getMonth(), getDay() is probably easiest.
Little bit simplified version for the most popular answer in this thread https://stackoverflow.com/a/3067896/5437379 :
function toYYYYMMDD(d) {
var yyyy = d.getFullYear().toString();
var mm = (d.getMonth() + 101).toString().slice(-2);
var dd = (d.getDate() + 100).toString().slice(-2);
return yyyy + mm + dd;
}
You can simply use This one line code to get date in year
var date = new Date().getFullYear() + "-" + (parseInt(new Date().getMonth()) + 1) + "-" + new Date().getDate();
How about Day.js?
It's only 2KB, and you can also dayjs().format('YYYY-MM-DD').
https://github.com/iamkun/dayjs
Use padStart:
Date.prototype.yyyymmdd = function() {
return [
this.getFullYear(),
(this.getMonth()+1).toString().padStart(2, '0'), // getMonth() is zero-based
this.getDate().toString().padStart(2, '0')
].join('-');
};
This code is fix to Pierre Guilbert's answer:
(it works even after 10000 years)
YYYYMMDD=new Date().toISOString().slice(0,new Date().toISOString().indexOf("T")).replace(/-/g,"")
Answering another for Simplicity & readability.
Also, editing existing predefined class members with new methods is not encouraged:
function getDateInYYYYMMDD() {
let currentDate = new Date();
// year
let yyyy = '' + currentDate.getFullYear();
// month
let mm = ('0' + (currentDate.getMonth() + 1)); // prepend 0 // +1 is because Jan is 0
mm = mm.substr(mm.length - 2); // take last 2 chars
// day
let dd = ('0' + currentDate.getDate()); // prepend 0
dd = dd.substr(dd.length - 2); // take last 2 chars
return yyyy + "" + mm + "" + dd;
}
var currentDateYYYYMMDD = getDateInYYYYMMDD();
console.log('currentDateYYYYMMDD: ' + currentDateYYYYMMDD);
[day,,month,,year]= Intl.DateTimeFormat(undefined, { year: 'numeric', month: '2-digit', day: '2-digit' }).formatToParts(new Date()),year.value+month.value+day.value
or
new Date().toJSON().slice(0,10).replace(/\/|-/g,'')
From ES6 onwards you can use template strings to make it a little shorter:
var now = new Date();
var todayString = `${now.getFullYear()}-${now.getMonth()}-${now.getDate()}`;
This solution does not zero pad. Look to the other good answers to see how to do that.
I usually use the code below when I need to do this.
var date = new Date($.now());
var dateString = (date.getFullYear() + '-'
+ ('0' + (date.getMonth() + 1)).slice(-2)
+ '-' + ('0' + (date.getDate())).slice(-2));
console.log(dateString); //Will print "2015-09-18" when this comment was written
To explain, .slice(-2) gives us the last two characters of the string.
So no matter what, we can add "0" to the day or month, and just ask for the last two since those are always the two we want.
So if the MyDate.getMonth() returns 9, it will be:
("0" + "9") // Giving us "09"
so adding .slice(-2) on that gives us the last two characters which is:
("0" + "9").slice(-2)
"09"
But if date.getMonth() returns 10, it will be:
("0" + "10") // Giving us "010"
so adding .slice(-2) gives us the last two characters, or:
("0" + "10").slice(-2)
"10"
It seems that mootools provides Date().format(): https://mootools.net/more/docs/1.6.0/Types/Date
I'm not sure if it worth including just for this particular task though.
If you don't mind including an additional (but small) library, Sugar.js provides lots of nice functionality for working with dates in JavaScript.
To format a date, use the format function:
new Date().format("{yyyy}{MM}{dd}")
I want to set a text box with a date (in dd/mm/yyyy format) 14 days ahead to current date in javascript . can any one help me regarding this ?
This should do it:
var myDate=new Date();
myDate.setDate(myDate.getDate()+14);
then
document.getElementById(YOUR_TEXTBOX_ID).value = myDate.getDate() + "/" +
(myDate.getMonth() + 1) + "/" + myDate.getFullYear();
Date.js is a handy script for all kinds of JavaScript date manipulation. I've used it to make many date-based interfaces, including calendar controls.
Like Deodeus suggested, use Date.js:
var myDate = Date.today().add(14).days();
document.getElementById('mytextbox').value = myDate.toString('dd/MM/yyyy');
Following is the function to increment date by one day in javascript.
function IncrementDate(date) {
var tempDate = new Date(date);
tempDate.setDate(tempDate.getDate() + 1);
return tempDate;
}
Function calling...
var currentDate = new Date();
var IncrementedDate = IncrementDate(currentDate);