Handling dates (formatting and timezones) in javascript - javascript

The use case is that I am getting the date in millis (from epoch) through an ajax call, which now needs to be interpreted in the javascript. This corresponded to some point of time in UTC.
Now I need to display this date in PST, as that is the only relevant time zone for the users irrespective of where they are opening the page from.
Also, I need to show it in a different format like 'yyyy-mm-dd HH:mm' rather than the default Locale string.
Can someone please tell me, how I can do that.

Create a new date using the UNIX milliseconds value plus the offset to PST, then create your formatted string using getUTC series of calls.

Moment.js is a pretty nice library for this type of thing.

I believe the timezones are determined by the user's timezone setting when you use the new Date() function.
var myDateTime = 1312312732923;
var myDate = new Date(myDateTime);
var myFormattedDate = myDate.getFullYear() + "-" + (myDate.getMonth()+1) + "-" + myDate.getDay();
http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/jsref_obj_date.asp

JavaScript has now way to set the timezone that you want to display something in. I've used Flot for a library for charting and their suggested solution is to use the getUTC methods when displaying the dates. That means that your server code can't send the standard millis from epoch (since that would display GMT time), but a small adjustment on the server will make your dates display correctly on the client.
To read about the problem, see http://flot.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/API.txt, and look for the heading "Time series data"

Use the Date object: https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date
Javascript's Date object works with milliseconds rather than seconds, so you'll have to multiply a UNIX timestamp by 1000:
var myDate = new Date(unix_timestamp * 1000);
Then, you can use the local-specific Date object to do whatever you'd like:
var output = myDate .getHours() + ':';
output += myDate .getMinutes() + ':';
output += myDate .getSeconds();
alert(output);
EDIT Ah, missed the part about using PST always, regardless of locale. unix_timesamp again is the epoch/UNIX timestamp you're getting from the server:
Try it here: http://jsfiddle.net/46PYZ/
// set to the UTC offset for the target timezone, PST = UTC - 8
var target_offset = -8;
// create a Date object
var myDate = new Date();
// add local time zone offset to get UTC time in msec
var utc_milliseconds = (unix_timesamp * 1000) + (myDate .getTimezoneOffset() * 60000);
// set the time using the calculated UTC timestamp
myDate.setTime(utc_milliseconds + (3600000 * target_offset));
// now build the yyyy-mm-dd HH:mm format
var output = myDate.getFullYear() + '-';
var month = myDate.getMonth() + 1;
output += (month < 10 ? '0' + month : month) + '-';
output += myDate.getDate() + ' ';
var hours = myDate.getHours() + 1;
output += (hours < 10 ? '0' + hours : hours) + ':';
var minutes= myDate.getMinutes() + 1;
output += (minutes< 10 ? '0' + minutes : minutes);

Related

JavaScript get this month's 1st date [duplicate]

Goal: Find the local time and UTC time offset then construct the URL in following format.
Example URL: /Actions/Sleep?duration=2002-10-10T12:00:00−05:00
The format is based on the W3C recommendation. The documentation says:
For example, 2002-10-10T12:00:00−05:00 (noon on 10 October 2002,
Central Daylight Savings Time as well as Eastern Standard Time in the U.S.)
is equal to 2002-10-10T17:00:00Z, five hours later than 2002-10-10T12:00:00Z.
So based on my understanding, I need to find my local time by new Date() then use getTimezoneOffset() function to compute the difference then attach it to the end of string.
Get local time with format
var local = new Date().format("yyyy-MM-ddThh:mm:ss"); // 2013-07-02T09:00:00
Get UTC time offset by hour
var offset = local.getTimezoneOffset() / 60; // 7
Construct URL (time part only)
var duration = local + "-" + offset + ":00"; // 2013-07-02T09:00:00-7:00
The above output means my local time is 2013/07/02 9am and difference from UTC is 7 hours (UTC is 7 hours ahead of local time)
So far it seems to work but what if getTimezoneOffset() returns negative value like -120?
I'm wondering how the format should look like in such case because I cannot figure out from W3C documentation.
Here's a simple helper function that will format JS dates for you.
function toIsoString(date) {
var tzo = -date.getTimezoneOffset(),
dif = tzo >= 0 ? '+' : '-',
pad = function(num) {
return (num < 10 ? '0' : '') + num;
};
return date.getFullYear() +
'-' + pad(date.getMonth() + 1) +
'-' + pad(date.getDate()) +
'T' + pad(date.getHours()) +
':' + pad(date.getMinutes()) +
':' + pad(date.getSeconds()) +
dif + pad(Math.floor(Math.abs(tzo) / 60)) +
':' + pad(Math.abs(tzo) % 60);
}
var dt = new Date();
console.log(toIsoString(dt));
getTimezoneOffset() returns the opposite sign of the format required by the spec that you referenced.
This format is also known as ISO8601, or more precisely as RFC3339.
In this format, UTC is represented with a Z while all other formats are represented by an offset from UTC. The meaning is the same as JavaScript's, but the order of subtraction is inverted, so the result carries the opposite sign.
Also, there is no method on the native Date object called format, so your function in #1 will fail unless you are using a library to achieve this. Refer to this documentation.
If you are seeking a library that can work with this format directly, I recommend trying moment.js. In fact, this is the default format, so you can simply do this:
var m = moment(); // get "now" as a moment
var s = m.format(); // the ISO format is the default so no parameters are needed
// sample output: 2013-07-01T17:55:13-07:00
This is a well-tested, cross-browser solution, and has many other useful features.
I think it is worth considering that you can get the requested info with just a single API call to the standard library...
new Date().toLocaleString( 'sv', { timeZoneName: 'short' } );
// produces "2019-10-30 15:33:47 GMT−4"
You would have to do text swapping if you want to add the 'T' delimiter, remove the 'GMT-', or append the ':00' to the end.
But then you can easily play with the other options if you want to eg. use 12h time or omit the seconds etc.
Note that I'm using Sweden as locale because it is one of the countries that uses ISO 8601 format. I think most of the ISO countries use this 'GMT-4' format for the timezone offset other then Canada which uses the time zone abbreviation eg. "EDT" for eastern-daylight-time.
You can get the same thing from the newer standard i18n function "Intl.DateTimeFormat()"
but you have to tell it to include the time via the options or it will just give date.
My answer is a slight variation for those who just want today's date in the local timezone in the YYYY-MM-DD format.
Let me be clear:
My Goal: get today's date in the user's timezone but formatted as ISO8601 (YYYY-MM-DD)
Here is the code:
new Date().toLocaleDateString("sv") // "2020-02-23" //
This works because the Sweden locale uses the ISO 8601 format.
This is my function for the clients timezone, it's lite weight and simple
function getCurrentDateTimeMySql() {
var tzoffset = (new Date()).getTimezoneOffset() * 60000; //offset in milliseconds
var localISOTime = (new Date(Date.now() - tzoffset)).toISOString().slice(0, 19).replace('T', ' ');
var mySqlDT = localISOTime;
return mySqlDT;
}
Check this:
function dateToLocalISO(date) {
const off = date.getTimezoneOffset()
const absoff = Math.abs(off)
return (new Date(date.getTime() - off*60*1000).toISOString().substr(0,23) +
(off > 0 ? '-' : '+') +
Math.floor(absoff / 60).toFixed(0).padStart(2,'0') + ':' +
(absoff % 60).toString().padStart(2,'0'))
}
// Test it:
d = new Date()
dateToLocalISO(d)
// ==> '2019-06-21T16:07:22.181-03:00'
// Is similar to:
moment = require('moment')
moment(d).format('YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.SSSZ')
// ==> '2019-06-21T16:07:22.181-03:00'
You can achieve this with a few simple extension methods. The following Date extension method returns just the timezone component in ISO format, then you can define another for the date/time part and combine them for a complete date-time-offset string.
Date.prototype.getISOTimezoneOffset = function () {
const offset = this.getTimezoneOffset();
return (offset < 0 ? "+" : "-") + Math.floor(Math.abs(offset / 60)).leftPad(2) + ":" + (Math.abs(offset % 60)).leftPad(2);
}
Date.prototype.toISOLocaleString = function () {
return this.getFullYear() + "-" + (this.getMonth() + 1).leftPad(2) + "-" +
this.getDate().leftPad(2) + "T" + this.getHours().leftPad(2) + ":" +
this.getMinutes().leftPad(2) + ":" + this.getSeconds().leftPad(2) + "." +
this.getMilliseconds().leftPad(3);
}
Number.prototype.leftPad = function (size) {
var s = String(this);
while (s.length < (size || 2)) {
s = "0" + s;
}
return s;
}
Example usage:
var date = new Date();
console.log(date.toISOLocaleString() + date.getISOTimezoneOffset());
// Prints "2020-08-05T16:15:46.525+10:00"
I know it's 2020 and most people are probably using Moment.js by now, but a simple copy & pastable solution is still sometimes handy to have.
(The reason I split the date/time and offset methods is because I'm using an old Datejs library which already provides a flexible toString method with custom format specifiers, but just doesn't include the timezone offset. Hence, I added toISOLocaleString for anyone without said library.)
Just my two cents here
I was facing this issue with datetimes so what I did is this:
const moment = require('moment-timezone')
const date = moment.tz('America/Bogota').format()
Then save date to db to be able to compare it from some query.
To install moment-timezone
npm i moment-timezone
No moment.js needed: Here's a full round trip answer, from an input type of "datetime-local" which outputs an ISOLocal string to UTCseconds at GMT and back:
<input type="datetime-local" value="2020-02-16T19:30">
isoLocal="2020-02-16T19:30"
utcSeconds=new Date(isoLocal).getTime()/1000
//here you have 1581899400 for utcSeconds
let isoLocal=new Date(utcSeconds*1000-new Date().getTimezoneOffset()*60000).toISOString().substring(0,16)
2020-02-16T19:30
date to ISO string,
with local(computer) time zone,
with or without milliseconds
ISO ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
how to use: toIsoLocalTime(new Date())
function toIsoLocalTime(value) {
if (value instanceof Date === false)
value = new Date();
const off = value.getTimezoneOffset() * -1;
const del = value.getMilliseconds() ? 'Z' : '.'; // have milliseconds ?
value = new Date(value.getTime() + off * 60000); // add or subtract time zone
return value
.toISOString()
.split(del)[0]
+ (off < 0 ? '-' : '+')
+ ('0' + Math.abs(Math.floor(off / 60))).substr(-2)
+ ':'
+ ('0' + Math.abs(off % 60)).substr(-2);
}
function test(value) {
const event = new Date(value);
console.info(value + ' -> ' + toIsoLocalTime(event) + ', test = ' + (event.getTime() === (new Date(toIsoLocalTime(event))).getTime() ));
}
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00+03:00'); // test with timezone
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00'); // test with local timezone
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00Z'); // test with UTC format
test('2099-12-31T23:59:59.999Z'); // date with milliseconds
test((new Date()).toString()); // now
consider using moment (like Matt's answer).
From version 2.20.0, you may call .toISOString(true) to prevent UTC conversion:
console.log(moment().toISOString(true));
// sample output: 2022-04-06T16:26:36.758+03:00
Use Temporal.
Temporal.Now.zonedDateTimeISO().toString()
// '2022-08-09T14:16:47.762797591-07:00[America/Los_Angeles]'
To omit the fractional seconds and IANA time zone:
Temporal.Now.zonedDateTimeISO().toString({
timeZoneName: "never",
fractionalSecondDigits: 0
})
// '2022-08-09T14:18:34-07:00'
Note: Temporal is currently (2022) available as a polyfill, but will soon be available in major browsers.
With luxon:
DateTime.now().toISODate() // 2022-05-23
Here are the functions I used for this end:
function localToGMTStingTime(localTime = null) {
var date = localTime ? new Date(localTime) : new Date();
return new Date(date.getTime() + (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000)).toISOString();
};
function GMTToLocalStingTime(GMTTime = null) {
var date = GMTTime ? new Date(GMTTime) : new Date();;
return new Date(date.getTime() - (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000)).toISOString();
};
let myDate = new Date(dateToBeFormatted * 1000); // depends if you have milliseconds, or seconds, then the * 1000 might be not, or required.
timeOffset = myDate.getTimezoneOffset();
myDate = new Date(myDate.getTime() - (timeOffset * 60 * 1000));
console.log(myDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]);
Inspired by https://stackoverflow.com/a/29774197/11127383, including timezone offset comment.
a simple way to get:
//using a sample date
let iso_str = '2022-06-11T01:51:59.618Z';
let d = new Date(iso_str);
let tz = 'America/Santiago'
let options = {
timeZone:tz ,
timeZoneName:'longOffset',
year: 'numeric',
month: 'numeric',
day: 'numeric',
hour: 'numeric',
minute: 'numeric',
second: 'numeric',
fractionalSecondDigits: 3
}
str_locale = d.toLocaleString("sv-SE",options);
iso_str_tz = str_locale.replace(/(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})\s+(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2}),(\d+)\s+/,'$1-$2-$3T$4:$5:$6.$7').replace('GMT−', '-' ).replace('GMT+','+')
console.log('iso_str : ',iso_str);
console.log('str_locale : ',str_locale);
console.log('iso_str_tz : ',iso_str_tz);
console.log('iso_str_tz --> date : ',new Date(iso_str_tz));
console.log('iso_str_tz --> iso_str: ',new Date(iso_str_tz).toISOString());
Using moment.js, you can use keepOffset parameter of toISOString:
toISOString(keepOffset?: boolean): string;
moment().toISOString(true)
Alternative approach with dayjs
import dayjs from "dayjs"
const formattedDateTime = dayjs(new Date()).format()
console.log(formattedDateTime) // Prints 2022-11-09T07:49:29+03:00
Here's another way a convert your date with an offset.
function toCustomDateString(date, offset) {
function pad(number) {
if (number < 10) {
return "0" + number;
}
return number;
}
var offsetHours = offset / 60;
var offsetMinutes = offset % 60;
var sign = (offset > 0) ? "+" : "-";
offsetHours = pad(Math.floor(Math.abs(offsetHours)));
offsetMinutes = pad(Math.abs(offsetMinutes));
return date.getFullYear() +
"-" + pad(date.getMonth() + 1) +
"-" + pad(date.getDate()) +
"T" + pad(date.getHours()) +
":" + pad(date.getMinutes()) +
":" + pad(date.getSeconds()) +
sign + offsetHours +
":" + offsetMinutes;
}
Then you can use it like this:
var date = new Date();
var offset = 330; // offset in minutes from UTC, for India it is 330 minutes ahead of UTC
var customDateString = toCustomDateString(date, offset);
console.log(customDateString);
// Output: "2023-02-09T10:29:31+05:30"
function setDate(){
var now = new Date();
now.setMinutes(now.getMinutes() - now.getTimezoneOffset());
var timeToSet = now.toISOString().slice(0,16);
/*
If you have an element called "eventDate" like the following:
<input type="datetime-local" name="eventdate" id="eventdate" />
and you would like to set the current and minimum time then use the following:
*/
var elem = document.getElementById("eventDate");
elem.value = timeToSet;
elem.min = timeToSet;
}
I found another more easy solution:
let now = new Date();
// correct time zone offset for generating iso string
now.setMinutes(now.getMinutes() - now.getTimezoneOffset())
now = now.toISOString();
I undo the timezone offset by substracting it from the current date object.
The UTC time from the date object is now pointing to the local time.
That gives you the possibility to get the iso date for the local time.

How to pass datetime from client(browser) to server [duplicate]

Goal: Find the local time and UTC time offset then construct the URL in following format.
Example URL: /Actions/Sleep?duration=2002-10-10T12:00:00−05:00
The format is based on the W3C recommendation. The documentation says:
For example, 2002-10-10T12:00:00−05:00 (noon on 10 October 2002,
Central Daylight Savings Time as well as Eastern Standard Time in the U.S.)
is equal to 2002-10-10T17:00:00Z, five hours later than 2002-10-10T12:00:00Z.
So based on my understanding, I need to find my local time by new Date() then use getTimezoneOffset() function to compute the difference then attach it to the end of string.
Get local time with format
var local = new Date().format("yyyy-MM-ddThh:mm:ss"); // 2013-07-02T09:00:00
Get UTC time offset by hour
var offset = local.getTimezoneOffset() / 60; // 7
Construct URL (time part only)
var duration = local + "-" + offset + ":00"; // 2013-07-02T09:00:00-7:00
The above output means my local time is 2013/07/02 9am and difference from UTC is 7 hours (UTC is 7 hours ahead of local time)
So far it seems to work but what if getTimezoneOffset() returns negative value like -120?
I'm wondering how the format should look like in such case because I cannot figure out from W3C documentation.
Here's a simple helper function that will format JS dates for you.
function toIsoString(date) {
var tzo = -date.getTimezoneOffset(),
dif = tzo >= 0 ? '+' : '-',
pad = function(num) {
return (num < 10 ? '0' : '') + num;
};
return date.getFullYear() +
'-' + pad(date.getMonth() + 1) +
'-' + pad(date.getDate()) +
'T' + pad(date.getHours()) +
':' + pad(date.getMinutes()) +
':' + pad(date.getSeconds()) +
dif + pad(Math.floor(Math.abs(tzo) / 60)) +
':' + pad(Math.abs(tzo) % 60);
}
var dt = new Date();
console.log(toIsoString(dt));
getTimezoneOffset() returns the opposite sign of the format required by the spec that you referenced.
This format is also known as ISO8601, or more precisely as RFC3339.
In this format, UTC is represented with a Z while all other formats are represented by an offset from UTC. The meaning is the same as JavaScript's, but the order of subtraction is inverted, so the result carries the opposite sign.
Also, there is no method on the native Date object called format, so your function in #1 will fail unless you are using a library to achieve this. Refer to this documentation.
If you are seeking a library that can work with this format directly, I recommend trying moment.js. In fact, this is the default format, so you can simply do this:
var m = moment(); // get "now" as a moment
var s = m.format(); // the ISO format is the default so no parameters are needed
// sample output: 2013-07-01T17:55:13-07:00
This is a well-tested, cross-browser solution, and has many other useful features.
I think it is worth considering that you can get the requested info with just a single API call to the standard library...
new Date().toLocaleString( 'sv', { timeZoneName: 'short' } );
// produces "2019-10-30 15:33:47 GMT−4"
You would have to do text swapping if you want to add the 'T' delimiter, remove the 'GMT-', or append the ':00' to the end.
But then you can easily play with the other options if you want to eg. use 12h time or omit the seconds etc.
Note that I'm using Sweden as locale because it is one of the countries that uses ISO 8601 format. I think most of the ISO countries use this 'GMT-4' format for the timezone offset other then Canada which uses the time zone abbreviation eg. "EDT" for eastern-daylight-time.
You can get the same thing from the newer standard i18n function "Intl.DateTimeFormat()"
but you have to tell it to include the time via the options or it will just give date.
My answer is a slight variation for those who just want today's date in the local timezone in the YYYY-MM-DD format.
Let me be clear:
My Goal: get today's date in the user's timezone but formatted as ISO8601 (YYYY-MM-DD)
Here is the code:
new Date().toLocaleDateString("sv") // "2020-02-23" //
This works because the Sweden locale uses the ISO 8601 format.
This is my function for the clients timezone, it's lite weight and simple
function getCurrentDateTimeMySql() {
var tzoffset = (new Date()).getTimezoneOffset() * 60000; //offset in milliseconds
var localISOTime = (new Date(Date.now() - tzoffset)).toISOString().slice(0, 19).replace('T', ' ');
var mySqlDT = localISOTime;
return mySqlDT;
}
Check this:
function dateToLocalISO(date) {
const off = date.getTimezoneOffset()
const absoff = Math.abs(off)
return (new Date(date.getTime() - off*60*1000).toISOString().substr(0,23) +
(off > 0 ? '-' : '+') +
Math.floor(absoff / 60).toFixed(0).padStart(2,'0') + ':' +
(absoff % 60).toString().padStart(2,'0'))
}
// Test it:
d = new Date()
dateToLocalISO(d)
// ==> '2019-06-21T16:07:22.181-03:00'
// Is similar to:
moment = require('moment')
moment(d).format('YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.SSSZ')
// ==> '2019-06-21T16:07:22.181-03:00'
You can achieve this with a few simple extension methods. The following Date extension method returns just the timezone component in ISO format, then you can define another for the date/time part and combine them for a complete date-time-offset string.
Date.prototype.getISOTimezoneOffset = function () {
const offset = this.getTimezoneOffset();
return (offset < 0 ? "+" : "-") + Math.floor(Math.abs(offset / 60)).leftPad(2) + ":" + (Math.abs(offset % 60)).leftPad(2);
}
Date.prototype.toISOLocaleString = function () {
return this.getFullYear() + "-" + (this.getMonth() + 1).leftPad(2) + "-" +
this.getDate().leftPad(2) + "T" + this.getHours().leftPad(2) + ":" +
this.getMinutes().leftPad(2) + ":" + this.getSeconds().leftPad(2) + "." +
this.getMilliseconds().leftPad(3);
}
Number.prototype.leftPad = function (size) {
var s = String(this);
while (s.length < (size || 2)) {
s = "0" + s;
}
return s;
}
Example usage:
var date = new Date();
console.log(date.toISOLocaleString() + date.getISOTimezoneOffset());
// Prints "2020-08-05T16:15:46.525+10:00"
I know it's 2020 and most people are probably using Moment.js by now, but a simple copy & pastable solution is still sometimes handy to have.
(The reason I split the date/time and offset methods is because I'm using an old Datejs library which already provides a flexible toString method with custom format specifiers, but just doesn't include the timezone offset. Hence, I added toISOLocaleString for anyone without said library.)
Just my two cents here
I was facing this issue with datetimes so what I did is this:
const moment = require('moment-timezone')
const date = moment.tz('America/Bogota').format()
Then save date to db to be able to compare it from some query.
To install moment-timezone
npm i moment-timezone
No moment.js needed: Here's a full round trip answer, from an input type of "datetime-local" which outputs an ISOLocal string to UTCseconds at GMT and back:
<input type="datetime-local" value="2020-02-16T19:30">
isoLocal="2020-02-16T19:30"
utcSeconds=new Date(isoLocal).getTime()/1000
//here you have 1581899400 for utcSeconds
let isoLocal=new Date(utcSeconds*1000-new Date().getTimezoneOffset()*60000).toISOString().substring(0,16)
2020-02-16T19:30
date to ISO string,
with local(computer) time zone,
with or without milliseconds
ISO ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
how to use: toIsoLocalTime(new Date())
function toIsoLocalTime(value) {
if (value instanceof Date === false)
value = new Date();
const off = value.getTimezoneOffset() * -1;
const del = value.getMilliseconds() ? 'Z' : '.'; // have milliseconds ?
value = new Date(value.getTime() + off * 60000); // add or subtract time zone
return value
.toISOString()
.split(del)[0]
+ (off < 0 ? '-' : '+')
+ ('0' + Math.abs(Math.floor(off / 60))).substr(-2)
+ ':'
+ ('0' + Math.abs(off % 60)).substr(-2);
}
function test(value) {
const event = new Date(value);
console.info(value + ' -> ' + toIsoLocalTime(event) + ', test = ' + (event.getTime() === (new Date(toIsoLocalTime(event))).getTime() ));
}
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00+03:00'); // test with timezone
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00'); // test with local timezone
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00Z'); // test with UTC format
test('2099-12-31T23:59:59.999Z'); // date with milliseconds
test((new Date()).toString()); // now
consider using moment (like Matt's answer).
From version 2.20.0, you may call .toISOString(true) to prevent UTC conversion:
console.log(moment().toISOString(true));
// sample output: 2022-04-06T16:26:36.758+03:00
Use Temporal.
Temporal.Now.zonedDateTimeISO().toString()
// '2022-08-09T14:16:47.762797591-07:00[America/Los_Angeles]'
To omit the fractional seconds and IANA time zone:
Temporal.Now.zonedDateTimeISO().toString({
timeZoneName: "never",
fractionalSecondDigits: 0
})
// '2022-08-09T14:18:34-07:00'
Note: Temporal is currently (2022) available as a polyfill, but will soon be available in major browsers.
With luxon:
DateTime.now().toISODate() // 2022-05-23
Here are the functions I used for this end:
function localToGMTStingTime(localTime = null) {
var date = localTime ? new Date(localTime) : new Date();
return new Date(date.getTime() + (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000)).toISOString();
};
function GMTToLocalStingTime(GMTTime = null) {
var date = GMTTime ? new Date(GMTTime) : new Date();;
return new Date(date.getTime() - (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000)).toISOString();
};
let myDate = new Date(dateToBeFormatted * 1000); // depends if you have milliseconds, or seconds, then the * 1000 might be not, or required.
timeOffset = myDate.getTimezoneOffset();
myDate = new Date(myDate.getTime() - (timeOffset * 60 * 1000));
console.log(myDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]);
Inspired by https://stackoverflow.com/a/29774197/11127383, including timezone offset comment.
a simple way to get:
//using a sample date
let iso_str = '2022-06-11T01:51:59.618Z';
let d = new Date(iso_str);
let tz = 'America/Santiago'
let options = {
timeZone:tz ,
timeZoneName:'longOffset',
year: 'numeric',
month: 'numeric',
day: 'numeric',
hour: 'numeric',
minute: 'numeric',
second: 'numeric',
fractionalSecondDigits: 3
}
str_locale = d.toLocaleString("sv-SE",options);
iso_str_tz = str_locale.replace(/(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})\s+(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2}),(\d+)\s+/,'$1-$2-$3T$4:$5:$6.$7').replace('GMT−', '-' ).replace('GMT+','+')
console.log('iso_str : ',iso_str);
console.log('str_locale : ',str_locale);
console.log('iso_str_tz : ',iso_str_tz);
console.log('iso_str_tz --> date : ',new Date(iso_str_tz));
console.log('iso_str_tz --> iso_str: ',new Date(iso_str_tz).toISOString());
Using moment.js, you can use keepOffset parameter of toISOString:
toISOString(keepOffset?: boolean): string;
moment().toISOString(true)
Alternative approach with dayjs
import dayjs from "dayjs"
const formattedDateTime = dayjs(new Date()).format()
console.log(formattedDateTime) // Prints 2022-11-09T07:49:29+03:00
Here's another way a convert your date with an offset.
function toCustomDateString(date, offset) {
function pad(number) {
if (number < 10) {
return "0" + number;
}
return number;
}
var offsetHours = offset / 60;
var offsetMinutes = offset % 60;
var sign = (offset > 0) ? "+" : "-";
offsetHours = pad(Math.floor(Math.abs(offsetHours)));
offsetMinutes = pad(Math.abs(offsetMinutes));
return date.getFullYear() +
"-" + pad(date.getMonth() + 1) +
"-" + pad(date.getDate()) +
"T" + pad(date.getHours()) +
":" + pad(date.getMinutes()) +
":" + pad(date.getSeconds()) +
sign + offsetHours +
":" + offsetMinutes;
}
Then you can use it like this:
var date = new Date();
var offset = 330; // offset in minutes from UTC, for India it is 330 minutes ahead of UTC
var customDateString = toCustomDateString(date, offset);
console.log(customDateString);
// Output: "2023-02-09T10:29:31+05:30"
function setDate(){
var now = new Date();
now.setMinutes(now.getMinutes() - now.getTimezoneOffset());
var timeToSet = now.toISOString().slice(0,16);
/*
If you have an element called "eventDate" like the following:
<input type="datetime-local" name="eventdate" id="eventdate" />
and you would like to set the current and minimum time then use the following:
*/
var elem = document.getElementById("eventDate");
elem.value = timeToSet;
elem.min = timeToSet;
}
I found another more easy solution:
let now = new Date();
// correct time zone offset for generating iso string
now.setMinutes(now.getMinutes() - now.getTimezoneOffset())
now = now.toISOString();
I undo the timezone offset by substracting it from the current date object.
The UTC time from the date object is now pointing to the local time.
That gives you the possibility to get the iso date for the local time.

How to ISO 8601 format a Date with Timezone Offset in JavaScript?

Goal: Find the local time and UTC time offset then construct the URL in following format.
Example URL: /Actions/Sleep?duration=2002-10-10T12:00:00−05:00
The format is based on the W3C recommendation. The documentation says:
For example, 2002-10-10T12:00:00−05:00 (noon on 10 October 2002,
Central Daylight Savings Time as well as Eastern Standard Time in the U.S.)
is equal to 2002-10-10T17:00:00Z, five hours later than 2002-10-10T12:00:00Z.
So based on my understanding, I need to find my local time by new Date() then use getTimezoneOffset() function to compute the difference then attach it to the end of string.
Get local time with format
var local = new Date().format("yyyy-MM-ddThh:mm:ss"); // 2013-07-02T09:00:00
Get UTC time offset by hour
var offset = local.getTimezoneOffset() / 60; // 7
Construct URL (time part only)
var duration = local + "-" + offset + ":00"; // 2013-07-02T09:00:00-7:00
The above output means my local time is 2013/07/02 9am and difference from UTC is 7 hours (UTC is 7 hours ahead of local time)
So far it seems to work but what if getTimezoneOffset() returns negative value like -120?
I'm wondering how the format should look like in such case because I cannot figure out from W3C documentation.
Here's a simple helper function that will format JS dates for you.
function toIsoString(date) {
var tzo = -date.getTimezoneOffset(),
dif = tzo >= 0 ? '+' : '-',
pad = function(num) {
return (num < 10 ? '0' : '') + num;
};
return date.getFullYear() +
'-' + pad(date.getMonth() + 1) +
'-' + pad(date.getDate()) +
'T' + pad(date.getHours()) +
':' + pad(date.getMinutes()) +
':' + pad(date.getSeconds()) +
dif + pad(Math.floor(Math.abs(tzo) / 60)) +
':' + pad(Math.abs(tzo) % 60);
}
var dt = new Date();
console.log(toIsoString(dt));
getTimezoneOffset() returns the opposite sign of the format required by the spec that you referenced.
This format is also known as ISO8601, or more precisely as RFC3339.
In this format, UTC is represented with a Z while all other formats are represented by an offset from UTC. The meaning is the same as JavaScript's, but the order of subtraction is inverted, so the result carries the opposite sign.
Also, there is no method on the native Date object called format, so your function in #1 will fail unless you are using a library to achieve this. Refer to this documentation.
If you are seeking a library that can work with this format directly, I recommend trying moment.js. In fact, this is the default format, so you can simply do this:
var m = moment(); // get "now" as a moment
var s = m.format(); // the ISO format is the default so no parameters are needed
// sample output: 2013-07-01T17:55:13-07:00
This is a well-tested, cross-browser solution, and has many other useful features.
I think it is worth considering that you can get the requested info with just a single API call to the standard library...
new Date().toLocaleString( 'sv', { timeZoneName: 'short' } );
// produces "2019-10-30 15:33:47 GMT−4"
You would have to do text swapping if you want to add the 'T' delimiter, remove the 'GMT-', or append the ':00' to the end.
But then you can easily play with the other options if you want to eg. use 12h time or omit the seconds etc.
Note that I'm using Sweden as locale because it is one of the countries that uses ISO 8601 format. I think most of the ISO countries use this 'GMT-4' format for the timezone offset other then Canada which uses the time zone abbreviation eg. "EDT" for eastern-daylight-time.
You can get the same thing from the newer standard i18n function "Intl.DateTimeFormat()"
but you have to tell it to include the time via the options or it will just give date.
My answer is a slight variation for those who just want today's date in the local timezone in the YYYY-MM-DD format.
Let me be clear:
My Goal: get today's date in the user's timezone but formatted as ISO8601 (YYYY-MM-DD)
Here is the code:
new Date().toLocaleDateString("sv") // "2020-02-23" //
This works because the Sweden locale uses the ISO 8601 format.
This is my function for the clients timezone, it's lite weight and simple
function getCurrentDateTimeMySql() {
var tzoffset = (new Date()).getTimezoneOffset() * 60000; //offset in milliseconds
var localISOTime = (new Date(Date.now() - tzoffset)).toISOString().slice(0, 19).replace('T', ' ');
var mySqlDT = localISOTime;
return mySqlDT;
}
Check this:
function dateToLocalISO(date) {
const off = date.getTimezoneOffset()
const absoff = Math.abs(off)
return (new Date(date.getTime() - off*60*1000).toISOString().substr(0,23) +
(off > 0 ? '-' : '+') +
Math.floor(absoff / 60).toFixed(0).padStart(2,'0') + ':' +
(absoff % 60).toString().padStart(2,'0'))
}
// Test it:
d = new Date()
dateToLocalISO(d)
// ==> '2019-06-21T16:07:22.181-03:00'
// Is similar to:
moment = require('moment')
moment(d).format('YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.SSSZ')
// ==> '2019-06-21T16:07:22.181-03:00'
You can achieve this with a few simple extension methods. The following Date extension method returns just the timezone component in ISO format, then you can define another for the date/time part and combine them for a complete date-time-offset string.
Date.prototype.getISOTimezoneOffset = function () {
const offset = this.getTimezoneOffset();
return (offset < 0 ? "+" : "-") + Math.floor(Math.abs(offset / 60)).leftPad(2) + ":" + (Math.abs(offset % 60)).leftPad(2);
}
Date.prototype.toISOLocaleString = function () {
return this.getFullYear() + "-" + (this.getMonth() + 1).leftPad(2) + "-" +
this.getDate().leftPad(2) + "T" + this.getHours().leftPad(2) + ":" +
this.getMinutes().leftPad(2) + ":" + this.getSeconds().leftPad(2) + "." +
this.getMilliseconds().leftPad(3);
}
Number.prototype.leftPad = function (size) {
var s = String(this);
while (s.length < (size || 2)) {
s = "0" + s;
}
return s;
}
Example usage:
var date = new Date();
console.log(date.toISOLocaleString() + date.getISOTimezoneOffset());
// Prints "2020-08-05T16:15:46.525+10:00"
I know it's 2020 and most people are probably using Moment.js by now, but a simple copy & pastable solution is still sometimes handy to have.
(The reason I split the date/time and offset methods is because I'm using an old Datejs library which already provides a flexible toString method with custom format specifiers, but just doesn't include the timezone offset. Hence, I added toISOLocaleString for anyone without said library.)
Just my two cents here
I was facing this issue with datetimes so what I did is this:
const moment = require('moment-timezone')
const date = moment.tz('America/Bogota').format()
Then save date to db to be able to compare it from some query.
To install moment-timezone
npm i moment-timezone
No moment.js needed: Here's a full round trip answer, from an input type of "datetime-local" which outputs an ISOLocal string to UTCseconds at GMT and back:
<input type="datetime-local" value="2020-02-16T19:30">
isoLocal="2020-02-16T19:30"
utcSeconds=new Date(isoLocal).getTime()/1000
//here you have 1581899400 for utcSeconds
let isoLocal=new Date(utcSeconds*1000-new Date().getTimezoneOffset()*60000).toISOString().substring(0,16)
2020-02-16T19:30
date to ISO string,
with local(computer) time zone,
with or without milliseconds
ISO ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
how to use: toIsoLocalTime(new Date())
function toIsoLocalTime(value) {
if (value instanceof Date === false)
value = new Date();
const off = value.getTimezoneOffset() * -1;
const del = value.getMilliseconds() ? 'Z' : '.'; // have milliseconds ?
value = new Date(value.getTime() + off * 60000); // add or subtract time zone
return value
.toISOString()
.split(del)[0]
+ (off < 0 ? '-' : '+')
+ ('0' + Math.abs(Math.floor(off / 60))).substr(-2)
+ ':'
+ ('0' + Math.abs(off % 60)).substr(-2);
}
function test(value) {
const event = new Date(value);
console.info(value + ' -> ' + toIsoLocalTime(event) + ', test = ' + (event.getTime() === (new Date(toIsoLocalTime(event))).getTime() ));
}
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00+03:00'); // test with timezone
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00'); // test with local timezone
test('2017-06-14T10:00:00Z'); // test with UTC format
test('2099-12-31T23:59:59.999Z'); // date with milliseconds
test((new Date()).toString()); // now
consider using moment (like Matt's answer).
From version 2.20.0, you may call .toISOString(true) to prevent UTC conversion:
console.log(moment().toISOString(true));
// sample output: 2022-04-06T16:26:36.758+03:00
Use Temporal.
Temporal.Now.zonedDateTimeISO().toString()
// '2022-08-09T14:16:47.762797591-07:00[America/Los_Angeles]'
To omit the fractional seconds and IANA time zone:
Temporal.Now.zonedDateTimeISO().toString({
timeZoneName: "never",
fractionalSecondDigits: 0
})
// '2022-08-09T14:18:34-07:00'
Note: Temporal is currently (2022) available as a polyfill, but will soon be available in major browsers.
With luxon:
DateTime.now().toISODate() // 2022-05-23
Here are the functions I used for this end:
function localToGMTStingTime(localTime = null) {
var date = localTime ? new Date(localTime) : new Date();
return new Date(date.getTime() + (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000)).toISOString();
};
function GMTToLocalStingTime(GMTTime = null) {
var date = GMTTime ? new Date(GMTTime) : new Date();;
return new Date(date.getTime() - (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000)).toISOString();
};
let myDate = new Date(dateToBeFormatted * 1000); // depends if you have milliseconds, or seconds, then the * 1000 might be not, or required.
timeOffset = myDate.getTimezoneOffset();
myDate = new Date(myDate.getTime() - (timeOffset * 60 * 1000));
console.log(myDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]);
Inspired by https://stackoverflow.com/a/29774197/11127383, including timezone offset comment.
a simple way to get:
//using a sample date
let iso_str = '2022-06-11T01:51:59.618Z';
let d = new Date(iso_str);
let tz = 'America/Santiago'
let options = {
timeZone:tz ,
timeZoneName:'longOffset',
year: 'numeric',
month: 'numeric',
day: 'numeric',
hour: 'numeric',
minute: 'numeric',
second: 'numeric',
fractionalSecondDigits: 3
}
str_locale = d.toLocaleString("sv-SE",options);
iso_str_tz = str_locale.replace(/(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})\s+(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2}),(\d+)\s+/,'$1-$2-$3T$4:$5:$6.$7').replace('GMT−', '-' ).replace('GMT+','+')
console.log('iso_str : ',iso_str);
console.log('str_locale : ',str_locale);
console.log('iso_str_tz : ',iso_str_tz);
console.log('iso_str_tz --> date : ',new Date(iso_str_tz));
console.log('iso_str_tz --> iso_str: ',new Date(iso_str_tz).toISOString());
Using moment.js, you can use keepOffset parameter of toISOString:
toISOString(keepOffset?: boolean): string;
moment().toISOString(true)
Alternative approach with dayjs
import dayjs from "dayjs"
const formattedDateTime = dayjs(new Date()).format()
console.log(formattedDateTime) // Prints 2022-11-09T07:49:29+03:00
Here's another way a convert your date with an offset.
function toCustomDateString(date, offset) {
function pad(number) {
if (number < 10) {
return "0" + number;
}
return number;
}
var offsetHours = offset / 60;
var offsetMinutes = offset % 60;
var sign = (offset > 0) ? "+" : "-";
offsetHours = pad(Math.floor(Math.abs(offsetHours)));
offsetMinutes = pad(Math.abs(offsetMinutes));
return date.getFullYear() +
"-" + pad(date.getMonth() + 1) +
"-" + pad(date.getDate()) +
"T" + pad(date.getHours()) +
":" + pad(date.getMinutes()) +
":" + pad(date.getSeconds()) +
sign + offsetHours +
":" + offsetMinutes;
}
Then you can use it like this:
var date = new Date();
var offset = 330; // offset in minutes from UTC, for India it is 330 minutes ahead of UTC
var customDateString = toCustomDateString(date, offset);
console.log(customDateString);
// Output: "2023-02-09T10:29:31+05:30"
function setDate(){
var now = new Date();
now.setMinutes(now.getMinutes() - now.getTimezoneOffset());
var timeToSet = now.toISOString().slice(0,16);
/*
If you have an element called "eventDate" like the following:
<input type="datetime-local" name="eventdate" id="eventdate" />
and you would like to set the current and minimum time then use the following:
*/
var elem = document.getElementById("eventDate");
elem.value = timeToSet;
elem.min = timeToSet;
}
I found another more easy solution:
let now = new Date();
// correct time zone offset for generating iso string
now.setMinutes(now.getMinutes() - now.getTimezoneOffset())
now = now.toISOString();
I undo the timezone offset by substracting it from the current date object.
The UTC time from the date object is now pointing to the local time.
That gives you the possibility to get the iso date for the local time.

Javascript getDate problem

I have a very weird problem with javascript's getDate function. At the start of some function, i've created a Date object using:
var day = new Date(date);
in which date is a unix timestamp.
I dont change the day object, but after a while I try to get the day of the month of this object, but day.getDate() keeps giving me the wrong value.
For example:
alert(day.getTime() + "-" + day.getDate() + "-"+ day.getMonth() +"-" + day.getFullYear() + "-" + day.getHours() + "-" + day.getMinutes() + "-" + day.getSeconds());
gives me the following result: 1290297600-15-0-1970-23-24-57
and at some other point the result is: 1290384000-15-0-1970-23-26-24
And this is the weird part, if you lookup the unixtimestamp 1290297600 you'll see that that's the timestamp for the 21st of november 2010 at 00:00:00 gmt (1290384000 is the next day, same time)
The timestamps are correct, but i cant make sense of the dates it gives me.
This happens to me in any browser.
What am i doing wrong?
The issue here is that the Date object in JavaScript doesn't take the Unix timestamp (seconds since the epoch), it actually takes the milliseconds since the epoch. If you just multiply your date variable by 1000 then you get the correct output.
Example here
Time = Unix timestamp format. I added 64800 second to the time so it would be converted to Mountain Standard Time.
*timestamp 24 * 60 * 60
.getTime()//milliseconds 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000
private DateField dateField1; ///////////////////////
dateField1= new DateField("Date:", DateField.DATE); f.append(dateField1);
Date d = new Date(); dateField1.setDate(d);
String TimeSeg = String.valueOf(((dateField1.getDate().getTime()/1000)+64800));

Converting DOMTimeStamp to localized HH:MM:SS MM-DD-YY via Javascript

The W3C Geolocation API (among others) uses DOMTimeStamp for its time-of-fix.
This is "milliseconds since the start of the Unix Epoch".
What's the easiest way to convert this into a human readable format and adjust for the local timezone?
One version of the Date constructor takes the number of "milliseconds since the start of the Unix Epoch" as its first and only parameter.
Assuming your timestamp is in a variable called domTimeStamp, the following code will convert this timestamp to local time (assuming the user has the correct date and timezone set on her/his machine) and print a human-readable version of the date:
var d = new Date(domTimeStamp);
document.write(d.toLocaleString());
Other built-in date-formatting methods include:
Date.toDateString()
Date.toLocaleDateString()
Date.toLocaleTimeString()
Date.toString()
Date.toTimeString()
Date.toUTCString()
Assuming your requirement is to print the exact pattern of "HH:MM:SS MM-DD-YY", you could do something like this:
var d = new Date(domTimeStamp);
var hours = d.getHours(),
minutes = d.getMinutes(),
seconds = d.getSeconds(),
month = d.getMonth() + 1,
day = d.getDate(),
year = d.getFullYear() % 100;
function pad(d) {
return (d < 10 ? "0" : "") + d;
}
var formattedDate = pad(hours) + ":"
+ pad(minutes) + ":"
+ pad(seconds) + " "
+ pad(month) + "-"
+ pad(day) + "-"
+ pad(year);
document.write(formattedDate);
var d = new Date(millisecondsSinceEpoch);
You can then format it however you like.
You may find datejs, particularly its toString formatting, helpful.

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