Calculate date from week number in JavaScript - javascript

How can I calculate the date in JavaScript knowing the week number and the year? For week number 20 and year 2013 I want to obtain 2013-05-16.
I am trying it like this:
Date.prototype.dayofYear = function () {
var d = new Date(this.getFullYear(), 0, 0)
return Math.floor((/* enter code here */ this - d) / 8.64e + 7)
}

function getDateOfWeek(w, y) {
var d = (1 + (w - 1) * 7); // 1st of January + 7 days for each week
return new Date(y, 0, d);
}
This uses the simple week definition, meaning the 20th week of 2013 is May 14.
To calculate the date of the start of a given ISO8601 week (which will always be a Monday)
function getDateOfISOWeek(w, y) {
var simple = new Date(y, 0, 1 + (w - 1) * 7);
var dow = simple.getDay();
var ISOweekStart = simple;
if (dow <= 4)
ISOweekStart.setDate(simple.getDate() - simple.getDay() + 1);
else
ISOweekStart.setDate(simple.getDate() + 8 - simple.getDay());
return ISOweekStart;
}
Result: the 20th week of 2013 is May 13, which can be confirmed here.

Sorry if this is a little verbose but this solution will also return the Sunday after calculating the week number. It combines answers I've seen from a couple different places:
function getSundayFromWeekNum(weekNum, year) {
var sunday = new Date(year, 0, (1 + (weekNum - 1) * 7));
while (sunday.getDay() !== 0) {
sunday.setDate(sunday.getDate() - 1);
}
return sunday;
}

ISO Weeks
function weekDateToDate (year, week, day) {
const firstDayOfYear = new Date(year, 0, 1)
const days = 2 + day + (week - 1) * 7 - firstDayOfYear.getDay()
return new Date(year, 0, days)
}

2019 version (if anyone wants to calculate the date of week's start)
The answer of Elle is pretty much right, but there is one exception:
if you want to get a date of start of the week - it won't help you because Elle's algorithm doesn't mind the day, from which the week starts of, at all.
And here is why:
Elle's solution
function getDateOfWeek(w, y) {
var d = (1 + (w - 1) * 7); // 1st of January + 7 days for each week
return new Date(y, 0, d);
}
Here you basically just calculating the amount of days from the start of the year (1st January). This means that it doesn't matter from which day your year starts of: Monday, Sunday or Friday - it will not make any difference.
To set the day, from which your week will start of (let's say Monday, for example), you just need to:
function getDateOfWeek(w, y) {
let date = new Date(y, 0, (1 + (w - 1) * 7)); // Elle's method
date.setDate(date.getDate() + (1 - date.getDay())); // 0 - Sunday, 1 - Monday etc
return date
}

Get date range according to week number
Date.prototype.getWeek = function () {
var target = new Date(this.valueOf());
var dayNr = (this.getDay() + 6) % 7;
target.setDate(target.getDate() - dayNr + 3);
var firstThursday = target.valueOf();
target.setMonth(0, 1);
if (target.getDay() != 4) {
target.setMonth(0, 1 + ((4 - target.getDay()) + 7) % 7);
}
return 1 + Math.ceil((firstThursday - target) / 604800000);
}
function getDateRangeOfWeek(weekNo){
var d1 = new Date();
numOfdaysPastSinceLastMonday = eval(d1.getDay()- 1);
d1.setDate(d1.getDate() - numOfdaysPastSinceLastMonday);
var weekNoToday = d1.getWeek();
var weeksInTheFuture = eval( weekNo - weekNoToday );
d1.setDate(d1.getDate() + eval( 7 * weeksInTheFuture ));
var rangeIsFrom = eval(d1.getMonth()+1) +"/" + d1.getDate() + "/" + d1.getFullYear();
d1.setDate(d1.getDate() + 6);
var rangeIsTo = eval(d1.getMonth()+1) +"/" + d1.getDate() + "/" + d1.getFullYear() ;
return rangeIsFrom + " to "+rangeIsTo;
};
getDateRangeOfWeek(10)
"3/6/2017 to 3/12/2017"
getDateRangeOfWeek(30)
"7/24/2017 to 7/30/2017"

function getDateOfWeek(weekNumber,year){
//Create a date object starting january first of chosen year, plus the number of days in a week multiplied by the week number to get the right date.
return new Date(year, 0, 1+((weekNumber-1)*7));
}
var myDate = getDateOfWeek(20,2013);

ISO week date (e.g. 2017-W32-3) to normal date:
const getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay = date => (date.getDay() + 6) % 7
const getIsoWeekDay = date => getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay(date) + 1
function weekDateToDate(year, week, weekDay) {
const zeroBasedWeek = week - 1
const zeroBasedWeekDay = weekDay - 1
let days = (zeroBasedWeek * 7) + zeroBasedWeekDay
// Dates start at 2017-01-01 and not 2017-01-00
days += 1
const firstDayOfYear = new Date(year, 0, 1)
const firstIsoWeekDay = getIsoWeekDay(firstDayOfYear)
const zeroBasedFirstIsoWeekDay = getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay(firstDayOfYear)
// If year begins with W52 or W53
if (firstIsoWeekDay > 4) days += 8 - firstIsoWeekDay
// Else begins with W01
else days -= zeroBasedFirstIsoWeekDay
return new Date(year, 0, days)
}
const expectedAndActual = [
[new Date('2007-01-01'), weekDateToDate(2007, 1, 1)],
[new Date('2015-11-24'), weekDateToDate(2015, 48, 2)],
[new Date('2015-12-31'), weekDateToDate(2015, 53, 4)],
[new Date('2016-01-03'), weekDateToDate(2015, 53, 7)],
[new Date('2017-01-01'), weekDateToDate(2016, 52, 7)],
[new Date('2017-01-02'), weekDateToDate(2017, 1, 1)],
[new Date('2017-05-07'), weekDateToDate(2017, 18, 7)],
[new Date('2018-12-31'), weekDateToDate(2019, 1, 1)],
]
expectedAndActual
.forEach(value => {
const expected = value[0].toISOString()
const actual = value[1].toISOString()
const isEqual = actual === expected
console.assert(isEqual, '%s !== %s', actual, expected)
console.log(actual, '===', expected)
})

#adius function worked for me but I made some improvements for people who are looking for a simple copy paste solution:
/**
* get date by week number
* #param {Number} year
* #param {Number} week
* #param {Number} day of week (optional; default = 0 (Sunday))
* #return {Date}
*/
function weekToDate(year, week, weekDay = 0) {
const getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay = date => (date.getDay() + 6) % 7;
const getIsoWeekDay = date => getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay(date) + 1;
const zeroBasedWeek = week - 1;
const zeroBasedWeekDay = weekDay - 1;
let days = (zeroBasedWeek * 7) + zeroBasedWeekDay;
// Dates start at 2017-01-01 and not 2017-01-00
days += 1;
const firstDayOfYear = new Date(year, 0, 1);
const firstIsoWeekDay = getIsoWeekDay(firstDayOfYear);
const zeroBasedFirstIsoWeekDay = getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay(firstDayOfYear);
// If year begins with W52 or W53
if (firstIsoWeekDay > 4) {
days += 8 - firstIsoWeekDay;
// Else begins with W01
} else {
days -= zeroBasedFirstIsoWeekDay;
}
return new Date(year, 0, days);
}
// test:
const x = [
{year: 2001, week: 10},
{year: 2019, week: 7},
{year: 2020, week: 5},
{year: 2020, week: 1},
{year: 2020, week: 12},
{year: 2020, week: 2},
{year: 2020, week: 40},
{year: 2021, week: 4},
{year: 2021, week: 3},
{year: 2021, week: 2},
{year: 2032, week: 1}
]
for (let i = 0; i < x.length; i++) {
let date = weekToDate(x[i].year, x[i].week, 0);
let d = new Date(date).toLocaleDateString('en-US', {
year: 'numeric',
month: 'long',
day: 'numeric'
})
console.log(d);
}

This is for getting the first monday of a week in the current year (ISO 8601):
function getFirstMondayOfWeek(weekNo) {
var firstMonday = new Date(new Date().getFullYear(), 0, 4, 0, 0, 0, 0);
while (firstMonday.getDay() != 1) {
firstMonday.setDate(firstMonday.getDate() - 1);
}
if (1 <= weekNo && weekNo <= 52)
return firstMonday.setDate(firstMonday.getDate() + 7 * (weekNo - 1));
firstMonday.setDate(firstMonday.getDate() + 7 * (weekNo - 1));
if (weekNo = 53 && firstMonday.getDate() >= 22 && firstMonday.getDate() <= 28)
return firstMonday;
return null;
}

I just created this one:
//Returns monday and saturday of the week
function getWeekRange(weekNo,YearNo) {
let firstDayofYear = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1);
if (firstDayofYear.getDay() > 4) {
let weekStart = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1 + (weekNo - 1) * 7 - firstDayofYear.getDay() + 8);
let weekEnd = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1 + (weekNo - 1) * 7 - firstDayofYear.getDay() + 8 + 5);
return { startDay: weekStart, endDay: weekEnd }
}
else {
let weekStart = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1 + (weekNo - 1) * 7 - firstDayofYear.getDay() + 1);
let weekEnd = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1 + (weekNo - 1) * 7 - firstDayofYear.getDay() + 1 + 5);
return { startDay: weekStart, endDay: weekEnd }
}
}

This is a short way
function addWeeks(numOfWeeks, date = new Date()) {
date.setDate(date.getDate() + numOfWeeks * 7);
return date;
}
Ex: Today is 2022-08-02
addWeeks(1)
the result will be today + 7
Tue Aug 09 2022 21:36:08 GMT+0100 (GMT+02:00)
but you may want only date without all info
addWeeks(1).toISOString().split('T')[0]
the result will be: 2022-08-09

ISO weeks (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_week_date):
const y = 2023;
const jan1 = new Date(y, 0, 1);
const jan1Day = jan1.getDay();
const daysToMonday = jan1Day === 1? 0 : jan1Day === 0? 1 : 8 - jan1Day
console.log('jan1', jan1)
console.log('jan1Day', jan1Day)
console.log('daysToMonday', daysToMonday)
// first Monday of the year
const firstMonday = daysToMonday === 0 ? jan1 : new Date(+jan1 + daysToMonday * 86400e3);
console.log('firstMonday', firstMonday)
// get monday of a specific week (20)
console.log('monday of week 20', new Date(+firstMonday + (20 - 1) * 7 * 86400e3))
// get sunday of a specific week (20)
console.log('sunday of week 20', new Date(+firstMonday + ((20 - 1) * 7 * 86400e3) + (86400e3 * 6) ))

Current accepted answer is close but not entirely correct. Here is the correct function:
function weekToDate(year, week) {
const days = 4 + 7 * (week - 1);
const date = new Date(year, 0, days);
return date;
}
This will yield a date that is guaranteed to be in the ISO week you asked for.
Then if you want a specific day in the week modify the date like so:
const dayOfWeek = 1 // monday
date.setDate(date.getDate() - date.getDay() + dayOfWeek)
Where dayOfWeek is the day of the week you want to get the date of. (1-7, 1 = monday)

Related

how can get particular day of date when you have start and end date

I have a start date 4/10/2021 and end date 4/12/2021
I want get Tuesday, Thursday and Friday date in jquery
I found this solution:
var x = new Date();
//set the financial year starting date
x.setFullYear(2021, 10, 04);
//set the next financial year starting date
var y = new Date();
y.setFullYear(2021, 12, 04);
var j = 1;
var count = 0;
//getting the all fridays in a financial year
for ( var i = 0; x<y; i += j) {
if (x.getDay() == 5) {
$("#append_text").append("Date : " + x.getDate() + "/"
+ (x.getMonth() + 1) + "<br>");
x = new Date(x.getTime() + (7 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000));
j = 7;
count++;
} else {
j = 1;
x = new Date(x.getTime() + (24 * 60 * 60 * 1000));
}
}
$("#append_text").append("total fridays : " + count + "<br>");
but it return only Friday and i think it doesn't work truly
The result is:
Date : 5/11
Date : 12/11
Date : 19/11
Date : 26/11
Date : 3/12
Date : 10/12
Date : 17/12
Date : 24/12
Date : 31/12
total fridays : 9
The solution link is here:
Get Friday Dates of Year in javascript using jquery
do you have any solution for that?
As mentioned in getDay() docs:
The getDay() method returns the day of the week for the specified date according to local time, where 0 represents Sunday.
So, clearly
if (x.getDay() == 5)
5 here stands for Friday. So, if you also need Tuesday as 2 & Thursday as 4, you simply need to modify for loop like:
var day = x.getDay();
if (day === 2 || day === 4 || day === 5)
Demo:
var x = new Date();
//set the financial year starting date
x.setFullYear(2021, 10, 04);
//set the next financial year starting date
var y = new Date();
y.setFullYear(2021, 12, 04);
var html = '';
var count = 0;
//getting the all fridays in a financial year
for (var i = 0; x < y; i++) {
var day = x.getDay();
if (day === 2 || day === 4 || day === 5) {
html += "Date : " + x.getDate() + "/" + (x.getMonth() + 1) + "<br>";
if (day === 5)count++;
}
x.setDate(x.getDate() + 1)
}
$("#append_text").append(html);
$("#append_text").append("total fridays : " + count + "<br>");
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id=append_text></div>
Try this.
var start = new Date(2021, 10, 04);
var end = new Date(2021, 12, 04);
var tuesdays = [], thursdays = [], fridays = [];
for (var current = start; current <= end; current.setDate(current.getDate() + 1)) {
var day = current.getDay();
switch (day) {
case 2: // tuesdays
tuesdays.push(formatDate(current));
break;
case 4: // thursdays
thursdays.push(formatDate(current));
break;
case 6: // fridays
fridays.push(formatDate(current));
break;
default: //other dates
break;
}
}
function formatDate(d) { // formats date to dd/mm/yyy
return d.getDate() + '/' + (d.getMonth() + 1) + '/' + d.getFullYear();
}
console.log(tuesdays.length + " Tuesdays: ", tuesdays.join('\t'));
console.log(thursdays.length + " Thursdays: ", thursdays.join('\t'));
console.log(fridays.length + " Fridays: ", fridays.join('\t'));
You can do this by iterating over every date between the two dates and saving the ones that fit some criterion, or you can get the first of the required dates, then add 7 days to get each weekly until the end date, e.g.
// Parse date in day/month/year format
function parseDMY(s) {
let [d, m, y] = s.split(/\D/);
return new Date(y, m-1, d);
}
// Get next day by dayNumber on or after date, default today
function getDayOfWeek(day, date) {
let d = date? new Date(+date) : new Date();
d.setDate(d.getDate() - d.getDay() + day +
(day < d.getDay()? 7 : 0));
return d;
}
// Format date as dd/mm/yyyy
function formatDMY(date) {
return date.toLocaleString('en-GB', {
year : 'numeric', // remove if year not required
month: '2-digit',
day : '2-digit'
});
}
// Given start and end date, get days by day number between
// dates inclusive
function getDaysBetweenDates(d0, d1, ...days){
let dStart = parseDMY(d0);
let dEnd = parseDMY(d1);
// Guard against endless loop
if (dEnd < dStart) return;
let dates = [];
while (dStart <= dEnd) {
days.forEach(day => {
let d = getDayOfWeek(day, dStart);
if (d <= dEnd) dates.push(formatDMY(d));
});
dStart.setDate(dStart.getDate() + 7);
}
return dates.sort(
(a, b) => a.split(/\D/).reverse().join('').localeCompare(
b.split(/\D/).reverse().join(''))
);
}
// Get all Tue, Thu and Fri between 4 Oct 2021 and 4 Dec 2021 inclusive
console.log(getDaysBetweenDates('4/10/2021', '4/12/2021', 2, 4, 5));
I've left the year in the date, it's easily removed by removing year: 'numeric', from the formatting options.
Note that in the OP:
y.setFullYear(2021, 12, 04);
creates a Date for 4 Jan, 2022 not 4 Dec 2021 because months are zero indexed, so December is 11. A month value of 12 rolls over to January of the following year.

Get the monday of a given week and year in Javascript [duplicate]

How can I calculate the date in JavaScript knowing the week number and the year? For week number 20 and year 2013 I want to obtain 2013-05-16.
I am trying it like this:
Date.prototype.dayofYear = function () {
var d = new Date(this.getFullYear(), 0, 0)
return Math.floor((/* enter code here */ this - d) / 8.64e + 7)
}
function getDateOfWeek(w, y) {
var d = (1 + (w - 1) * 7); // 1st of January + 7 days for each week
return new Date(y, 0, d);
}
This uses the simple week definition, meaning the 20th week of 2013 is May 14.
To calculate the date of the start of a given ISO8601 week (which will always be a Monday)
function getDateOfISOWeek(w, y) {
var simple = new Date(y, 0, 1 + (w - 1) * 7);
var dow = simple.getDay();
var ISOweekStart = simple;
if (dow <= 4)
ISOweekStart.setDate(simple.getDate() - simple.getDay() + 1);
else
ISOweekStart.setDate(simple.getDate() + 8 - simple.getDay());
return ISOweekStart;
}
Result: the 20th week of 2013 is May 13, which can be confirmed here.
Sorry if this is a little verbose but this solution will also return the Sunday after calculating the week number. It combines answers I've seen from a couple different places:
function getSundayFromWeekNum(weekNum, year) {
var sunday = new Date(year, 0, (1 + (weekNum - 1) * 7));
while (sunday.getDay() !== 0) {
sunday.setDate(sunday.getDate() - 1);
}
return sunday;
}
ISO Weeks
function weekDateToDate (year, week, day) {
const firstDayOfYear = new Date(year, 0, 1)
const days = 2 + day + (week - 1) * 7 - firstDayOfYear.getDay()
return new Date(year, 0, days)
}
2019 version (if anyone wants to calculate the date of week's start)
The answer of Elle is pretty much right, but there is one exception:
if you want to get a date of start of the week - it won't help you because Elle's algorithm doesn't mind the day, from which the week starts of, at all.
And here is why:
Elle's solution
function getDateOfWeek(w, y) {
var d = (1 + (w - 1) * 7); // 1st of January + 7 days for each week
return new Date(y, 0, d);
}
Here you basically just calculating the amount of days from the start of the year (1st January). This means that it doesn't matter from which day your year starts of: Monday, Sunday or Friday - it will not make any difference.
To set the day, from which your week will start of (let's say Monday, for example), you just need to:
function getDateOfWeek(w, y) {
let date = new Date(y, 0, (1 + (w - 1) * 7)); // Elle's method
date.setDate(date.getDate() + (1 - date.getDay())); // 0 - Sunday, 1 - Monday etc
return date
}
Get date range according to week number
Date.prototype.getWeek = function () {
var target = new Date(this.valueOf());
var dayNr = (this.getDay() + 6) % 7;
target.setDate(target.getDate() - dayNr + 3);
var firstThursday = target.valueOf();
target.setMonth(0, 1);
if (target.getDay() != 4) {
target.setMonth(0, 1 + ((4 - target.getDay()) + 7) % 7);
}
return 1 + Math.ceil((firstThursday - target) / 604800000);
}
function getDateRangeOfWeek(weekNo){
var d1 = new Date();
numOfdaysPastSinceLastMonday = eval(d1.getDay()- 1);
d1.setDate(d1.getDate() - numOfdaysPastSinceLastMonday);
var weekNoToday = d1.getWeek();
var weeksInTheFuture = eval( weekNo - weekNoToday );
d1.setDate(d1.getDate() + eval( 7 * weeksInTheFuture ));
var rangeIsFrom = eval(d1.getMonth()+1) +"/" + d1.getDate() + "/" + d1.getFullYear();
d1.setDate(d1.getDate() + 6);
var rangeIsTo = eval(d1.getMonth()+1) +"/" + d1.getDate() + "/" + d1.getFullYear() ;
return rangeIsFrom + " to "+rangeIsTo;
};
getDateRangeOfWeek(10)
"3/6/2017 to 3/12/2017"
getDateRangeOfWeek(30)
"7/24/2017 to 7/30/2017"
function getDateOfWeek(weekNumber,year){
//Create a date object starting january first of chosen year, plus the number of days in a week multiplied by the week number to get the right date.
return new Date(year, 0, 1+((weekNumber-1)*7));
}
var myDate = getDateOfWeek(20,2013);
ISO week date (e.g. 2017-W32-3) to normal date:
const getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay = date => (date.getDay() + 6) % 7
const getIsoWeekDay = date => getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay(date) + 1
function weekDateToDate(year, week, weekDay) {
const zeroBasedWeek = week - 1
const zeroBasedWeekDay = weekDay - 1
let days = (zeroBasedWeek * 7) + zeroBasedWeekDay
// Dates start at 2017-01-01 and not 2017-01-00
days += 1
const firstDayOfYear = new Date(year, 0, 1)
const firstIsoWeekDay = getIsoWeekDay(firstDayOfYear)
const zeroBasedFirstIsoWeekDay = getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay(firstDayOfYear)
// If year begins with W52 or W53
if (firstIsoWeekDay > 4) days += 8 - firstIsoWeekDay
// Else begins with W01
else days -= zeroBasedFirstIsoWeekDay
return new Date(year, 0, days)
}
const expectedAndActual = [
[new Date('2007-01-01'), weekDateToDate(2007, 1, 1)],
[new Date('2015-11-24'), weekDateToDate(2015, 48, 2)],
[new Date('2015-12-31'), weekDateToDate(2015, 53, 4)],
[new Date('2016-01-03'), weekDateToDate(2015, 53, 7)],
[new Date('2017-01-01'), weekDateToDate(2016, 52, 7)],
[new Date('2017-01-02'), weekDateToDate(2017, 1, 1)],
[new Date('2017-05-07'), weekDateToDate(2017, 18, 7)],
[new Date('2018-12-31'), weekDateToDate(2019, 1, 1)],
]
expectedAndActual
.forEach(value => {
const expected = value[0].toISOString()
const actual = value[1].toISOString()
const isEqual = actual === expected
console.assert(isEqual, '%s !== %s', actual, expected)
console.log(actual, '===', expected)
})
#adius function worked for me but I made some improvements for people who are looking for a simple copy paste solution:
/**
* get date by week number
* #param {Number} year
* #param {Number} week
* #param {Number} day of week (optional; default = 0 (Sunday))
* #return {Date}
*/
function weekToDate(year, week, weekDay = 0) {
const getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay = date => (date.getDay() + 6) % 7;
const getIsoWeekDay = date => getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay(date) + 1;
const zeroBasedWeek = week - 1;
const zeroBasedWeekDay = weekDay - 1;
let days = (zeroBasedWeek * 7) + zeroBasedWeekDay;
// Dates start at 2017-01-01 and not 2017-01-00
days += 1;
const firstDayOfYear = new Date(year, 0, 1);
const firstIsoWeekDay = getIsoWeekDay(firstDayOfYear);
const zeroBasedFirstIsoWeekDay = getZeroBasedIsoWeekDay(firstDayOfYear);
// If year begins with W52 or W53
if (firstIsoWeekDay > 4) {
days += 8 - firstIsoWeekDay;
// Else begins with W01
} else {
days -= zeroBasedFirstIsoWeekDay;
}
return new Date(year, 0, days);
}
// test:
const x = [
{year: 2001, week: 10},
{year: 2019, week: 7},
{year: 2020, week: 5},
{year: 2020, week: 1},
{year: 2020, week: 12},
{year: 2020, week: 2},
{year: 2020, week: 40},
{year: 2021, week: 4},
{year: 2021, week: 3},
{year: 2021, week: 2},
{year: 2032, week: 1}
]
for (let i = 0; i < x.length; i++) {
let date = weekToDate(x[i].year, x[i].week, 0);
let d = new Date(date).toLocaleDateString('en-US', {
year: 'numeric',
month: 'long',
day: 'numeric'
})
console.log(d);
}
This is for getting the first monday of a week in the current year (ISO 8601):
function getFirstMondayOfWeek(weekNo) {
var firstMonday = new Date(new Date().getFullYear(), 0, 4, 0, 0, 0, 0);
while (firstMonday.getDay() != 1) {
firstMonday.setDate(firstMonday.getDate() - 1);
}
if (1 <= weekNo && weekNo <= 52)
return firstMonday.setDate(firstMonday.getDate() + 7 * (weekNo - 1));
firstMonday.setDate(firstMonday.getDate() + 7 * (weekNo - 1));
if (weekNo = 53 && firstMonday.getDate() >= 22 && firstMonday.getDate() <= 28)
return firstMonday;
return null;
}
I just created this one:
//Returns monday and saturday of the week
function getWeekRange(weekNo,YearNo) {
let firstDayofYear = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1);
if (firstDayofYear.getDay() > 4) {
let weekStart = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1 + (weekNo - 1) * 7 - firstDayofYear.getDay() + 8);
let weekEnd = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1 + (weekNo - 1) * 7 - firstDayofYear.getDay() + 8 + 5);
return { startDay: weekStart, endDay: weekEnd }
}
else {
let weekStart = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1 + (weekNo - 1) * 7 - firstDayofYear.getDay() + 1);
let weekEnd = new Date(yearNo, 0, 1 + (weekNo - 1) * 7 - firstDayofYear.getDay() + 1 + 5);
return { startDay: weekStart, endDay: weekEnd }
}
}
This is a short way
function addWeeks(numOfWeeks, date = new Date()) {
date.setDate(date.getDate() + numOfWeeks * 7);
return date;
}
Ex: Today is 2022-08-02
addWeeks(1)
the result will be today + 7
Tue Aug 09 2022 21:36:08 GMT+0100 (GMT+02:00)
but you may want only date without all info
addWeeks(1).toISOString().split('T')[0]
the result will be: 2022-08-09
ISO weeks (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_week_date):
const y = 2023;
const jan1 = new Date(y, 0, 1);
const jan1Day = jan1.getDay();
const daysToMonday = jan1Day === 1? 0 : jan1Day === 0? 1 : 8 - jan1Day
console.log('jan1', jan1)
console.log('jan1Day', jan1Day)
console.log('daysToMonday', daysToMonday)
// first Monday of the year
const firstMonday = daysToMonday === 0 ? jan1 : new Date(+jan1 + daysToMonday * 86400e3);
console.log('firstMonday', firstMonday)
// get monday of a specific week (20)
console.log('monday of week 20', new Date(+firstMonday + (20 - 1) * 7 * 86400e3))
// get sunday of a specific week (20)
console.log('sunday of week 20', new Date(+firstMonday + ((20 - 1) * 7 * 86400e3) + (86400e3 * 6) ))
Current accepted answer is close but not entirely correct. Here is the correct function:
function weekToDate(year, week) {
const days = 4 + 7 * (week - 1);
const date = new Date(year, 0, days);
return date;
}
This will yield a date that is guaranteed to be in the ISO week you asked for.
Then if you want a specific day in the week modify the date like so:
const dayOfWeek = 1 // monday
date.setDate(date.getDate() - date.getDay() + dayOfWeek)
Where dayOfWeek is the day of the week you want to get the date of. (1-7, 1 = monday)

Outputting date of next business quarter and count

I have the following code below that is intended to provide two things. A count of days until the next business quarter and the date of the next business quarter. This worked for Q3, but since it started showing Q4, the results are off.
You will see that the date shows the start of the next month. That is intended. It serves as the starting point for the next quarter.
Does anyone see what I'm doing wrong?
var today = new Date();
var quarter = Math.floor((today.getMonth() + 3) / 3);
var nextQ;
if (quarter == 4) {
nextQ = new Date (today.getFullYear() + 1, 1, 1);
} else {
nextQ = new Date (today.getFullYear(), quarter * 3, 1);
}
var millis1 = today.getTime();
var millis2 = nextQ.getTime();
var dayDiff = (millis2 - millis1) / 1000 / 60 / 60 / 24;
dayDiffRound = Math.floor(dayDiff);
$('#nextDrawingCount').text(dayDiffRound);
var drawingDate = nextQ.toLocaleString('en-us', { weekday: 'long' }) + ", " + nextQ.toLocaleString('default', { month: 'long' }) + " " + ("0" + nextQ.getDate()).slice(-2) + ", " + nextQ.getFullYear();
$('#nextDrawing').text(drawingDate);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<p class="dGw">The next drawing is <span id="nextDrawingCount"></span> days from now (<span id="nextDrawing"></span>).</p>
ECMAScript months are zero indexed, so if quarter is 4:
if (quarter == 4) {
nextQ = new Date (today.getFullYear() + 1, 1, 1);
and nextQ is set to 1 February, not 1 January. So change the month index to 0:
if (quarter == 4) {
nextQ = new Date (today.getFullYear() + 1, 0, 1);
to get 1 January.
The else branch works because in:
nextQ = new Date (today.getFullYear(), quarter * 3, 1);
if quarter is say 2, then the month is set to 6, which is July or the start of your quarter 3.
However, you don't have to treat Q4 any differently, because if quarter is 4, then 3x4 is 12 and the date will automatically roll over to the next year (i.e. it will become January of the following year), e.g.:
function getNextQuarter(today = new Date()) {
var quarter = Math.floor((today.getMonth() + 3) / 3);
return new Date (today.getFullYear(), quarter * 3, 1);
}
[new Date(), // current date
new Date(2019,5,1), // 1 June 2019
new Date(2019,11,1) // 1 December 2019
].forEach(d => console.log(`${d.toDateString()} => ${getNextQuarter(d).toDateString()}`));

Get weeks in year

Moment js has a function to get the number of days in a month : http://momentjs.com/docs/#/displaying/days-in-month/
However I could not find a function to find the number of iso weeks in a year (52 or 53).
Here's an answer that isn't dependent on a library. It uses a function to calculate the week in the year that 31 December falls in for the required year. If the week is 1 (i.e. 31 December is in the first week of the following year), it moves the day number lower until it gets a different value, which will be the last week of the required year.
function getWeekNumber(d) {
// Copy date so don't modify original
d = new Date(+d);
d.setHours(0, 0, 0, 0);
// Set to nearest Thursday: current date + 4 - current day number
// Make Sunday's day number 7
d.setDate(d.getDate() + 4 - (d.getDay() || 7));
// Get first day of year
var yearStart = new Date(d.getFullYear(), 0, 1);
// Calculate full weeks to nearest Thursday
var weekNo = Math.ceil((((d - yearStart) / 86400000) + 1) / 7)
// Return array of year and week number
return [d.getFullYear(), weekNo];
}
function weeksInYear(year) {
var month = 11,
day = 31,
week;
// Find week that 31 Dec is in. If is first week, reduce date until
// get previous week.
do {
d = new Date(year, month, day--);
week = getWeekNumber(d)[1];
} while (week == 1);
return week;
}
[2015, 2016, 2029, new Date().getFullYear()].forEach(year =>
console.log(`${year} has ${weeksInYear(year)} weeks`)
);
The getWeekNumber code is from here: Get week of year in JavaScript like in PHP.
Edit
Alternatively, if 31 December is in week 1 of the following year, then the subject year has 52 weeks and otherwise has 53 weeks.
function getWeekNumber(d) {
d = new Date(+d);
d.setHours(0, 0, 0, 0);
d.setDate(d.getDate() + 4 - (d.getDay() || 7));
var yearStart = new Date(d.getFullYear(), 0, 1);
var weekNo = Math.ceil((((d - yearStart) / 86400000) + 1) / 7)
return [d.getFullYear(), weekNo];
}
function weeksInYear(year) {
var d = new Date(year, 11, 31);
var week = getWeekNumber(d)[1];
return week == 1 ? 52 : week;
}
[2015, 2016, 2029, new Date().getFullYear()].forEach(year =>
console.log(`${year} has ${weeksInYear(year)} weeks`)
);
Use isoWeek on the last day of the year to get the number of weeks e.g. :
function weeksInYear(year) {
return Math.max(
moment(new Date(year, 11, 31)).isoWeek()
, moment(new Date(year, 11, 31-7)).isoWeek()
);
}
Feb. 4th 2014 the weeksInYear & isoWeeksInYear functions were added to moment.js
So today you can just use moment().isoWeeksInYear()or moment().weeksInYear()
For more into see the docs
Thought I would post a much simpler version that I derived from the wikipedia article.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_week_date
The statement in the article is:
"The number of weeks in a given year is equal to the corresponding
week number of 28 December, because it is the only date that is always
in the last week of the year since it is a week before 4 January which
is always in the first week of the following year.
Using only the ordinal year number y, the number of weeks in that year
can be determined from a function, that
returns the day of the week of 31 December"
Therefore getWeekFor(new Date(2022, 11, 28) replacing the year with any year you want will always give you the number of weeks for that year.
// modified from https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6117814/get-week-of-year-in-javascript-like-in-php
const getWeekFor = (date) => {
const d = new Date(Date.UTC(date.getFullYear(), date.getMonth(), date.getDate()));
const dayNum = d.getUTCDay() || 7;
const utc = new Date(d.setUTCDate(d.getUTCDate() + 4 - dayNum));
const yearStart = new Date(Date.UTC(utc.getUTCFullYear(), 0, 1)).getTime();
return Math.ceil(((d.getTime() - yearStart) / 86400000 + 1) / 7);
};
const weeks = getWeekFor(new Date(2020, 11, 28)) // 53.
console.log(weeks);
Get all weeks and periods of that week for a year, for whom it may interest
function getWeekPeriodsInYear(year) {
weeks = [];
// Get the first and last day of the year
currentDay = moment([year, 1]).startOf('year');
dayOfWeek = moment(currentDay).day();
lastDay = moment([year, 1]).endOf('year');
weeksInYear = moment(`${year}-01-01`).isoWeeksInYear();
daysToAdd = 7 - dayOfWeek;
for (let weekNumber = 1; weekNumber < weeksInYear + 1; weekNumber++) {
let endOfWeek = moment(currentDay).add(daysToAdd, 'days');
if (moment(endOfWeek).year() !== year) {
endOfWeek = lastDay;
}
weeks.push({ weekNumber, start: currentDay.toDate(), end: endOfWeek.toDate() });
currentDay = endOfWeek.add(1, 'day');
daysToAdd = 6;
}
return weeks;
}
getWeekPeriodsInYear(new Date().getFullYear()).forEach(period =>
document.write(`Week ${period.weekNumber} from ${moment(period.start).format('DD-MM-YYYY')} up to and including ${moment(period.end).format('DD-MM-YYYY')}<br/>`)
);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.29.1/moment.min.js"></script>

How to get current week number in javascript? [duplicate]

How do I get the current weeknumber of the year, like PHP's date('W')?
It should be the ISO-8601 week number of year, weeks starting on Monday.
You should be able to get what you want here: http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/js-date6.htm#YWD.
A better link on the same site is: Working with weeks.
Edit
Here is some code based on the links provided and that posted eariler by Dommer. It has been lightly tested against results at http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/js-date6.htm#YWD. Please test thoroughly, no guarantee provided.
Edit 2017
There was an issue with dates during the period that daylight saving was observed and years where 1 Jan was Friday. Fixed by using all UTC methods. The following returns identical results to Moment.js.
/* For a given date, get the ISO week number
*
* Based on information at:
*
* THIS PAGE (DOMAIN EVEN) DOESN'T EXIST ANYMORE UNFORTUNATELY
* http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/weekcalc.htm#WNR
*
* Algorithm is to find nearest thursday, it's year
* is the year of the week number. Then get weeks
* between that date and the first day of that year.
*
* Note that dates in one year can be weeks of previous
* or next year, overlap is up to 3 days.
*
* e.g. 2014/12/29 is Monday in week 1 of 2015
* 2012/1/1 is Sunday in week 52 of 2011
*/
function getWeekNumber(d) {
// Copy date so don't modify original
d = new Date(Date.UTC(d.getFullYear(), d.getMonth(), d.getDate()));
// Set to nearest Thursday: current date + 4 - current day number
// Make Sunday's day number 7
d.setUTCDate(d.getUTCDate() + 4 - (d.getUTCDay()||7));
// Get first day of year
var yearStart = new Date(Date.UTC(d.getUTCFullYear(),0,1));
// Calculate full weeks to nearest Thursday
var weekNo = Math.ceil(( ( (d - yearStart) / 86400000) + 1)/7);
// Return array of year and week number
return [d.getUTCFullYear(), weekNo];
}
var result = getWeekNumber(new Date());
document.write('It\'s currently week ' + result[1] + ' of ' + result[0]);
Hours are zeroed when creating the "UTC" date.
Minimized, prototype version (returns only week-number):
Date.prototype.getWeekNumber = function(){
var d = new Date(Date.UTC(this.getFullYear(), this.getMonth(), this.getDate()));
var dayNum = d.getUTCDay() || 7;
d.setUTCDate(d.getUTCDate() + 4 - dayNum);
var yearStart = new Date(Date.UTC(d.getUTCFullYear(),0,1));
return Math.ceil((((d - yearStart) / 86400000) + 1)/7)
};
document.write('The current ISO week number is ' + new Date().getWeekNumber());
Test section
In this section, you can enter any date in YYYY-MM-DD format and check that this code gives the same week number as Moment.js ISO week number (tested over 50 years from 2000 to 2050).
Date.prototype.getWeekNumber = function(){
var d = new Date(Date.UTC(this.getFullYear(), this.getMonth(), this.getDate()));
var dayNum = d.getUTCDay() || 7;
d.setUTCDate(d.getUTCDate() + 4 - dayNum);
var yearStart = new Date(Date.UTC(d.getUTCFullYear(),0,1));
return Math.ceil((((d - yearStart) / 86400000) + 1)/7)
};
function checkWeek() {
var s = document.getElementById('dString').value;
var m = moment(s, 'YYYY-MM-DD');
document.getElementById('momentWeek').value = m.format('W');
document.getElementById('answerWeek').value = m.toDate().getWeekNumber();
}
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.18.1/moment.min.js"></script>
Enter date YYYY-MM-DD: <input id="dString" value="2021-02-22">
<button onclick="checkWeek(this)">Check week number</button><br>
Moment: <input id="momentWeek" readonly><br>
Answer: <input id="answerWeek" readonly>
You can use momentjs library also:
moment().format('W')
Not ISO-8601 week number but if the search engine pointed you here anyway.
As said above but without a class:
let now = new Date();
let onejan = new Date(now.getFullYear(), 0, 1);
let week = Math.ceil((((now.getTime() - onejan.getTime()) / 86400000) + onejan.getDay() + 1) / 7);
console.log(week);
Accordily http://javascript.about.com/library/blweekyear.htm
Date.prototype.getWeek = function() {
var onejan = new Date(this.getFullYear(), 0, 1);
var millisecsInDay = 86400000;
return Math.ceil((((this - onejan) / millisecsInDay) + onejan.getDay() + 1) / 7);
};
let d = new Date(2020,11,30);
for (let i=0; i<14; i++) {
console.log(`${d.toDateString()} is week ${d.getWeek()}`);
d.setDate(d.getDate() + 1);
}
Jacob Wright's Date.format() library implements date formatting in the style of PHP's date() function and supports the ISO-8601 week number:
new Date().format('W');
It may be a bit overkill for just a week number, but it does support PHP style formatting and is quite handy if you'll be doing a lot of this.
The code below calculates the correct ISO 8601 week number. It matches PHP's date("W") for every week between 1/1/1970 and 1/1/2100.
/**
* Get the ISO week date week number
*/
Date.prototype.getWeek = function () {
// Create a copy of this date object
var target = new Date(this.valueOf());
// ISO week date weeks start on Monday, so correct the day number
var dayNr = (this.getDay() + 6) % 7;
// ISO 8601 states that week 1 is the week with the first Thursday of that year
// Set the target date to the Thursday in the target week
target.setDate(target.getDate() - dayNr + 3);
// Store the millisecond value of the target date
var firstThursday = target.valueOf();
// Set the target to the first Thursday of the year
// First, set the target to January 1st
target.setMonth(0, 1);
// Not a Thursday? Correct the date to the next Thursday
if (target.getDay() !== 4) {
target.setMonth(0, 1 + ((4 - target.getDay()) + 7) % 7);
}
// The week number is the number of weeks between the first Thursday of the year
// and the Thursday in the target week (604800000 = 7 * 24 * 3600 * 1000)
return 1 + Math.ceil((firstThursday - target) / 604800000);
}
Source: Taco van den Broek
If you're not into extending prototypes, then here's a function:
function getWeek(date) {
if (!(date instanceof Date)) date = new Date();
// ISO week date weeks start on Monday, so correct the day number
var nDay = (date.getDay() + 6) % 7;
// ISO 8601 states that week 1 is the week with the first Thursday of that year
// Set the target date to the Thursday in the target week
date.setDate(date.getDate() - nDay + 3);
// Store the millisecond value of the target date
var n1stThursday = date.valueOf();
// Set the target to the first Thursday of the year
// First, set the target to January 1st
date.setMonth(0, 1);
// Not a Thursday? Correct the date to the next Thursday
if (date.getDay() !== 4) {
date.setMonth(0, 1 + ((4 - date.getDay()) + 7) % 7);
}
// The week number is the number of weeks between the first Thursday of the year
// and the Thursday in the target week (604800000 = 7 * 24 * 3600 * 1000)
return 1 + Math.ceil((n1stThursday - date) / 604800000);
}
Sample usage:
getWeek(); // Returns 37 (or whatever the current week is)
getWeek(new Date('Jan 2, 2011')); // Returns 52
getWeek(new Date('Jan 1, 2016')); // Returns 53
getWeek(new Date('Jan 4, 2016')); // Returns 1
getWeekOfYear: function(date) {
var target = new Date(date.valueOf()),
dayNumber = (date.getUTCDay() + 6) % 7,
firstThursday;
target.setUTCDate(target.getUTCDate() - dayNumber + 3);
firstThursday = target.valueOf();
target.setUTCMonth(0, 1);
if (target.getUTCDay() !== 4) {
target.setUTCMonth(0, 1 + ((4 - target.getUTCDay()) + 7) % 7);
}
return Math.ceil((firstThursday - target) / (7 * 24 * 3600 * 1000)) + 1;
}
Following code is timezone-independent (UTC dates used) and works according to the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
Get the weeknumber of any given Date
function week(year,month,day) {
function serial(days) { return 86400000*days; }
function dateserial(year,month,day) { return (new Date(year,month-1,day).valueOf()); }
function weekday(date) { return (new Date(date)).getDay()+1; }
function yearserial(date) { return (new Date(date)).getFullYear(); }
var date = year instanceof Date ? year.valueOf() : typeof year === "string" ? new Date(year).valueOf() : dateserial(year,month,day),
date2 = dateserial(yearserial(date - serial(weekday(date-serial(1))) + serial(4)),1,3);
return ~~((date - date2 + serial(weekday(date2) + 5))/ serial(7));
}
Example
console.log(
week(2016, 06, 11),//23
week(2015, 9, 26),//39
week(2016, 1, 1),//53
week(2016, 1, 4),//1
week(new Date(2016, 0, 4)),//1
week("11 january 2016")//2
);
I found useful the Java SE's SimpleDateFormat class described on Oracle's specification:
http://goo.gl/7MbCh5. In my case in Google Apps Script it worked like this:
function getWeekNumber() {
var weekNum = parseInt(Utilities.formatDate(new Date(), "GMT", "w"));
Logger.log(weekNum);
}
For example in a spreadsheet macro you can retrieve the actual timezone of the file:
function getWeekNumber() {
var weekNum = parseInt(Utilities.formatDate(new Date(), SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet().getSpreadsheetTimeZone(), "w"));
Logger.log(weekNum);
}
This adds "getWeek" method to Date.prototype which returns number of week from the beginning of the year. The argument defines which day of the week to consider the first. If no argument passed, first day is assumed Sunday.
/**
* Get week number in the year.
* #param {Integer} [weekStart=0] First day of the week. 0-based. 0 for Sunday, 6 for Saturday.
* #return {Integer} 0-based number of week.
*/
Date.prototype.getWeek = function(weekStart) {
var januaryFirst = new Date(this.getFullYear(), 0, 1);
if(weekStart !== undefined && (typeof weekStart !== 'number' || weekStart % 1 !== 0 || weekStart < 0 || weekStart > 6)) {
throw new Error('Wrong argument. Must be an integer between 0 and 6.');
}
weekStart = weekStart || 0;
return Math.floor((((this - januaryFirst) / 86400000) + januaryFirst.getDay() - weekStart) / 7);
};
If you are already in an Angular project you could use $filter('date').
For example:
var myDate = new Date();
var myWeek = $filter('date')(myDate, 'ww');
The code snippet which works pretty well for me is this one:
var yearStart = +new Date(d.getFullYear(), 0, 1);
var today = +new Date(d.getFullYear(),d.getMonth(),d.getDate());
var dayOfYear = ((today - yearStart + 1) / 86400000);
return Math.ceil(dayOfYear / 7).toString();
Note:
d is my Date for which I want the current week number.
The + converts the Dates into numbers (working with TypeScript).
With Luxon (https://github.com/moment/luxon) :
import { DateTime } from 'luxon';
const week: number = DateTime.fromJSDate(new Date()).weekNumber;
This week number thing has been a real pain in the a**. Most trivial solutions around the web didn't really work for me as they worked most of the time but all of them broke at some point, especially when year changed and last week of the year was suddenly next year's first week etc. Even Angular's date filter showed incorrect data (it was the 1st week of next year, Angular gave week 53).
Note: The examples are designed to work with European weeks (Mon first)!
getWeek()
Date.prototype.getWeek = function(){
// current week's Thursday
var curWeek = new Date(this.getTime());
curWeek.setDay(4);
// current year's first week's Thursday
var firstWeek = new Date(curWeek.getFullYear(), 0, 4);
firstWeek.setDay(4);
return (curWeek.getDayIndex() - firstWeek.getDayIndex()) / 7 + 1;
};
setDay()
/**
* Make a setDay() prototype for Date
* Sets week day for the date
*/
Date.prototype.setDay = function(day){
// Get day and make Sunday to 7
var weekDay = this.getDay() || 7;
var distance = day - weekDay;
this.setDate(this.getDate() + distance);
return this;
}
getDayIndex()
/*
* Returns index of given date (from Jan 1st)
*/
Date.prototype.getDayIndex = function(){
var start = new Date(this.getFullYear(), 0, 0);
var diff = this - start;
var oneDay = 86400000;
return Math.floor(diff / oneDay);
};
I have tested this and it seems to be working very well but if you notice a flaw in it, please let me know.
Here is my implementation for calculating the week number in JavaScript. corrected for summer and winter time offsets as well.
I used the definition of the week from this article: ISO 8601
Weeks are from mondays to sunday, and january 4th is always in the first week of the year.
// add get week prototype functions
// weeks always start from monday to sunday
// january 4th is always in the first week of the year
Date.prototype.getWeek = function () {
year = this.getFullYear();
var currentDotw = this.getWeekDay();
if (this.getMonth() == 11 && this.getDate() - currentDotw > 28) {
// if true, the week is part of next year
return this.getWeekForYear(year + 1);
}
if (this.getMonth() == 0 && this.getDate() + 6 - currentDotw < 4) {
// if true, the week is part of previous year
return this.getWeekForYear(year - 1);
}
return this.getWeekForYear(year);
}
// returns a zero based day, where monday = 0
// all weeks start with monday
Date.prototype.getWeekDay = function () {
return (this.getDay() + 6) % 7;
}
// corrected for summer/winter time
Date.prototype.getWeekForYear = function (year) {
var currentDotw = this.getWeekDay();
var fourjan = new Date(year, 0, 4);
var firstDotw = fourjan.getWeekDay();
var dayTotal = this.getDaysDifferenceCorrected(fourjan) // the difference in days between the two dates.
// correct for the days of the week
dayTotal += firstDotw; // the difference between the current date and the first monday of the first week,
dayTotal -= currentDotw; // the difference between the first monday and the current week's monday
// day total should be a multiple of 7 now
var weeknumber = dayTotal / 7 + 1; // add one since it gives a zero based week number.
return weeknumber;
}
// corrected for timezones and offset
Date.prototype.getDaysDifferenceCorrected = function (other) {
var millisecondsDifference = (this - other);
// correct for offset difference. offsets are in minutes, the difference is in milliseconds
millisecondsDifference += (other.getTimezoneOffset()- this.getTimezoneOffset()) * 60000;
// return day total. 1 day is 86400000 milliseconds, floor the value to return only full days
return Math.floor(millisecondsDifference / 86400000);
}
for testing i used the following JavaScript tests in Qunit
var runweekcompare = function(result, expected) {
equal(result, expected,'Week nr expected value: ' + expected + ' Actual value: ' + result);
}
test('first week number test', function () {
expect(5);
var temp = new Date(2016, 0, 4); // is the monday of the first week of the year
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 1);
var temp = new Date(2016, 0, 4, 23, 50); // is the monday of the first week of the year
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 1);
var temp = new Date(2016, 0, 10, 23, 50); // is the sunday of the first week of the year
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 1);
var temp = new Date(2016, 0, 11, 23, 50); // is the second week of the year
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 2);
var temp = new Date(2016, 1, 29, 23, 50); // is the 9th week of the year
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 9);
});
test('first day is part of last years last week', function () {
expect(2);
var temp = new Date(2016, 0, 1, 23, 50); // is the first last week of the previous year
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 53);
var temp = new Date(2011, 0, 2, 23, 50); // is the first last week of the previous year
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 52);
});
test('last day is part of next years first week', function () {
var temp = new Date(2013, 11, 30); // is part of the first week of 2014
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 1);
});
test('summer winter time change', function () {
expect(2);
var temp = new Date(2000, 2, 26);
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 12);
var temp = new Date(2000, 2, 27);
runweekcompare(temp.getWeek(), 13);
});
test('full 20 year test', function () {
//expect(20 * 12 * 28 * 2);
for (i = 2000; i < 2020; i++) {
for (month = 0; month < 12; month++) {
for (day = 1; day < 29 ; day++) {
var temp = new Date(i, month, day);
var expectedweek = temp.getWeek();
var temp2 = new Date(i, month, day, 23, 50);
var resultweek = temp.getWeek();
equal(expectedweek, Math.round(expectedweek), 'week number whole number expected ' + Math.round(expectedweek) + ' resulted week nr ' + expectedweek);
equal(resultweek, expectedweek, 'Week nr expected value: ' + expectedweek + ' Actual value: ' + resultweek + ' for year ' + i + ' month ' + month + ' day ' + day);
}
}
}
});
Here is a slight adaptation for Typescript that will also return the dates for the week start and week end. I think it's common to have to display those in a user interface, since people don't usually remember week numbers.
function getWeekNumber(d: Date) {
// Copy date so don't modify original
d = new Date(Date.UTC(d.getFullYear(), d.getMonth(), d.getDate()));
// Set to nearest Thursday: current date + 4 - current day number Make
// Sunday's day number 7
d.setUTCDate(d.getUTCDate() + 4 - (d.getUTCDay() || 7));
// Get first day of year
const yearStart = new Date(Date.UTC(d.getUTCFullYear(), 0, 1));
// Calculate full weeks to nearest Thursday
const weekNo = Math.ceil(
((d.getTime() - yearStart.getTime()) / 86400000 + 1) / 7
);
const weekStartDate = new Date(d.getTime());
weekStartDate.setUTCDate(weekStartDate.getUTCDate() - 3);
const weekEndDate = new Date(d.getTime());
weekEndDate.setUTCDate(weekEndDate.getUTCDate() + 3);
return [d.getUTCFullYear(), weekNo, weekStartDate, weekEndDate] as const;
}
This is my typescript implementation which I tested against some dates. This implementation allows you to set the first day of the week to any day.
//sunday = 0, monday = 1, ...
static getWeekNumber(date: Date, firstDay = 1): number {
const d = new Date(date.getTime());
d.setHours(0, 0, 0, 0);
//Set to first day of the week since it is the same weeknumber
while(d.getDay() != firstDay){
d.setDate(d.getDate() - 1);
}
const dayOfYear = this.getDayOfYear(d);
let weken = Math.floor(dayOfYear/7);
// add an extra week if 4 or more days are in this year.
const daysBefore = ((dayOfYear % 7) - 1);
if(daysBefore >= 4){
weken += 1;
}
//if the last 3 days onf the year,it is the first week
const t = new Date(d.getTime());
t.setDate(t.getDate() + 3);
if(t.getFullYear() > d.getFullYear()){
return 1;
}
weken += 1;
return weken;
}
private static getDayOfYear(date: Date){
const start = new Date(date.getFullYear(), 0, 0);
const diff = (date.getTime() - start.getTime()) + ((start.getTimezoneOffset() - date.getTimezoneOffset()) * 60 * 1000);
const oneDay = 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24;
const day = Math.floor(diff / oneDay);
return day;
}
Tests:
describe('getWeeknumber', () => {
it('should be ok for 0 sunday', () => {
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2015, 0, 4), 0)).toBe(1);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2017, 0, 1), 0)).toBe(1);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2017, 0, 2), 0)).toBe(1);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2017, 0, 8), 0)).toBe(2);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2017, 0, 9), 0)).toBe(2);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2020, 11, 28), 0)).toBe(53);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2020, 11, 29), 0)).toBe(53);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2020, 11, 30), 0)).toBe(53);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2020, 11, 31), 0)).toBe(53);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2022, 0, 3), 0)).toBe(1);
});
it('should be ok for monday 1 default', () => {
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2015, 0, 4), 1)).toBe(1);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2017, 0, 1), 1)).toBe(52);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2017, 0, 2), 1)).toBe(1);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2017, 0, 8), 1)).toBe(1);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2017, 0, 9), 1)).toBe(2);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2020, 11, 28), 1)).toBe(53);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2020, 11, 29), 1)).toBe(53);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2020, 11, 30), 1)).toBe(53);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2020, 11, 31), 1)).toBe(53);
expect(DateUtils.getWeekNumber(new Date(2022, 0, 3), 1)).toBe(1);
});
});
I tried a lot to get the shortest code to get the weeknumber ISO-conform.
Date.prototype.getWeek=function(){
var date=new Date(this);
date.setHours(0,0,0,0);
return Math.round(((date.setDate(this.getDate()+2-(this.getDay()||7))-date.setMonth(0,4))/8.64e7+3+(date.getDay()||7))/7)+"/"+date.getFullYear();}
The variable date is necessary to avoid to alter the original this. I used the return values of setDate() and setMonth() to dispense with getTime() to save code length and I used an expontial number for milliseconds of a day instead of a multiplication of single elements or a number with five zeros. this is Date or Number of milliseconds, return value is String e.g. "49/2017".
Another library-based option: use d3-time-format:
const formatter = d3.timeFormat('%U');
const weekNum = formatter(new Date());
Shortest workaround for Angular2+ DatePipe, adjusted for ISO-8601:
import {DatePipe} from "#angular/common";
public rightWeekNum: number = 0;
constructor(private datePipe: DatePipe) { }
calcWeekOfTheYear(dateInput: Date) {
let falseWeekNum = parseInt(this.datePipe.transform(dateInput, 'ww'));
this.rightWeekNum = (dateInput.getDay() == 0) ? falseWeekNumber-1 : falseWeekNumber;
}
Inspired from RobG's answer.
What I wanted is the day of the week of a given date. So my answer is simply based on the day of the week Sunday. But you can choose the other day (i.e. Monday, Tuesday...);
First I find the Sunday in a given date and then calculate the week.
function getStartWeekDate(d = null) {
const now = d || new Date();
now.setHours(0, 0, 0, 0);
const sunday = new Date(now);
sunday.setDate(sunday.getDate() - sunday.getDay());
return sunday;
}
function getWeek(date) {
const sunday = getStartWeekDate(date);
const yearStart = new Date(Date.UTC(2021, 0, 1));
const weekNo = Math.ceil((((sunday - yearStart) / 86400000) + 1) / 7);
return weekNo;
}
// tests
for (let i = 0; i < 7; i++) {
let m = 14 + i;
let x = getWeek(new Date(2021, 2, m));
console.log('week num: ' + x, x + ' == ' + 11, x == 11, m);
}
for (let i = 0; i < 7; i++) {
let m = 21 + i;
let x = getWeek(new Date(2021, 2, m));
console.log('week num: ' + x, x + ' == ' + 12, x == 12, 'date day: ' + m);
}
for (let i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
let m = 28 + i;
let x = getWeek(new Date(2021, 2, m));
console.log('week num: ' + x, x + ' == ' + 13, x == 13, 'date day: ' + m);
}
for (let i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
let m = 1 + i;
let x = getWeek(new Date(2021, 3, m));
console.log('week num: ' + x, x + ' == ' + 13, x == 13, 'date day: ' + m);
}
for (let i = 0; i < 7; i++) {
let m = 4 + i;
let x = getWeek(new Date(2021, 3, m));
console.log('week num: ' + x, x + ' == ' + 14, x == 14, 'date day: ' + m);
}
now = new Date();
today = new Date(now.getFullYear(), now.getMonth(), now.getDate());
firstOfYear = new Date(now.getFullYear(), 0, 1);
numOfWeek = Math.ceil((((today - firstOfYear) / 86400000)-1)/7);
function getWeek(param) {
let onejan = new Date(param.getFullYear(), 0, 1);
return Math.ceil((((param.getTime() - onejan.getTime()) / 86400000) + onejan.getDay()) / 7);
}

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