I want to get the time difference between saved time and current time in javascript or jquery. My saved time looks like Sun Oct 24 15:55:56 GMT+05:30 2010.
The date format code in java looks like
String newDate = "2010/10/24 15:55:56";
DateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss");
Date date = format.parse(newDate);
How to compare it with the current time and get the difference?
Is there any inbuilt function in jquery or javascript??
Any suggestions or links would be appreciative!!!
Thanks in Advance!
Update
Date is stored as varchar in the DB. I am retriving it to a String variable and then change it to java.util.Date object. The java code looks like
String newDate = "2010/10/24 15:55:56";
DateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss");
Date date = format.parse(newDate);
This date object was sent to client. There i want to compare the saved date with current date and want to show the time difference like 2 secs ago, 2 hours ago, 2 days ago etc... like exactly in facebook. I have gone through some date to timestamp conversion tutorial in java script and now i can get the difference in timestamp. Now, i want to know how i shall change it to some format like "2 secs or 2 days or 24 hours"??. Or, how i shall change it back to date format???
Convert them into timestamps which are actually integers and can get subtracted from each other. The you just have to convert back the resulting timestamp to a javascript date object.
var diff = new Date();
diff.setTime( time2.getTime()-time1.getTime() );
You dont need to explicit convert, just do this:
var timediff = new Date() - savedTime;
This will return the difference in milliseconds.
jQuery doesn't add anything for working with dates. I'd recommend using Datejs in the event that the standard JavaScript Date API isn't sufficient.
Perhaps you could clarify exactly what input and output you're aiming for. What do you mean by "the difference?" There is more than one way to express the difference between to instants in time (primarily units and output string formatting).
Edit: since you said you're working with jQuery, how about using CuteTime? (Demo page)
Related
For example if I do for the above date object something like: value.hours(), I get as output 16 instead of 18. I believe it returns the hours in the original GMT time, not like in my date object which is GMT+2. I can of course add 2 to the returned result, but it becomes cumbersome. Is there any way to get the hours correctly in my case?
I'm not sure as to what you've already tried, but I put the following into JSFiddle and it worked like a charm. I am currently in CST in America and it is 8:30 in the morning here. When I ran the snippet below I got today's date at 1:30 PM which I would assume is accurate in difference.
HTML
<div id="m1"></div>
JavaScript
var a = moment.tz(new Date(), "GMT");
document.getElementById('m1').innerHTML = a.format("YYYY MM DD; HH:mm");
The Moment.js documentation states the following in regards to creating a Moment object with a native JavaScript Date object:
You can create a Moment with a pre-existing native JavaScript Date object.
var day = new Date(2011, 9, 16);
var dayWrapper = moment(day);
This clones the Date object; further changes to the Date won't affect the Moment, and vice-versa.
To find the information quoted above quickly, when you reach the Moment.js documentation, it is located under the Parse section under sub-section Date.
To display local time:
value.local();
value.hours(); // 18
To reverse:
value.utc();
value.hours(); // 16
I think that you can solve it by doing what the docs says. Something like this:
moment().tz("America/Los_Angeles").format();
https://momentjs.com/timezone/docs/#/using-timezones/
I'm trying to convert foreign time to Local Time. I'm getting a date and time in Europe/London. Currently I'm using moment-timezone to get my code working, however its giving me a wrong output.
resultDate = new moment('2017-06-30T22:10:00').tz('Europe/London').format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss');
I think the code thinks that the date input is already in local time where I need to convert it into Europe/London which would give a local result, where as what I want is to actually convert the foreign time to local time.
In short the date and time as my input (2017-06-30T22:00:00), I am expecting it to be 7 hours in advance (2017-07-1T05:00:00) since I currently live in Asia/Manila, 7 hours in advance to London. However I'm getting 2017/06/30 15:00:00 +0100 as my result.
Is there a way for me to do this by utilizing the information 'Europe/London' or 'Asia/Manila' as seen in my code?
You can use moment.tz to parse your input as Europe/London time and then use the tz function to convert it to Asia/Manila.
The first parses your input using the given timezone while the latter convert a moment objet to a given timezone.
Here a working sample:
// Parse input considering as London tz
var timeInLondon = moment.tz('2017-06-30T22:10:00', 'Europe/London');
// Converting input to Manila
var timeInManila = timeInLondon.tz('Asia/Manila');
// Show result
console.log(timeInManila.format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss'));
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.18.1/moment.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment-timezone/0.5.11/moment-timezone-with-data-2010-2020.min.js"></script>
Hi im using moment js to convert this string 20:00 I tried:
var a = moment("20:00", "HH:mm")
console.log(a.format()) // 2016-09-08T20:00:00+01:00
the problem when I store in mongodb it become
2016-09-10T19:00:00.000Z
I want to store 2016-09-10T20:00:00.000Z
anyway can explain why please ?
When you say that you want to store 2016-09-10T20:00:00.000Z what you are saying is that you want to assume that your date and time is UTC.
To assume that the date you are parsing is a UTC value, use moment.utc
var a = moment.utc("20:00", "HH:mm")
console.log(a.format()) // 2016-09-08T20:00:00Z
Note that when you parse a time without a date, moment assumes the current date. This may not be the behavior that you want.
I'm also not sure if you want a UTC date (which is what you are saying), or a local date without an offset indicator. If you want a local date without an offset indicator, simply use a format without an offset:
moment.utc("20:00", "HH:mm").format('YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.SSS')
"2016-09-08T20:00:00.000"
If you are dealing with local dates that do not have a time zone association, I recommend using moment.utc to parse, as this will ensure that the time does not get shifted to account for DST in the current time zone.
For more information about how to parse dates into the time zone or offset that you would like in moment, see my blog post on the subject.
This it how it should look:
var a = moment("20:00", "HH:mm")
console.log(a.utcOffset('+0000').format())
<script src="http://momentjs.com/downloads/moment.min.js"></script>
Doe, the problem is that you are using timezones when you create the date.
MomentJS uses your current timezone automatically.
Mongo however saves the time as it would be in another timezone.
Therefore, if you want the two strings to format the same way, you need to set the timezone.
I am using this bootstrap datetime picker. I noticed that when I choose a day and convert the milliseconds using var d1 = new Date(milliseconds); it is converted into the day before my selected day. Is there a particular reason for this?
Example:
I select Tuesday, October 1st:
I log the date object after it is converted:
You must convert it into a Unix timestamp , which is a better way of tracking date/time.
Use new Date('your_date_string').getTime() / 1000 which gives you the timestamp or using PHP (strtotime) .
The date object that is being logged for you is probably coming from your system/browser settings(local).
Do not use JavaScript date and time calculations in web applications unless you ABSOLUTELY have to.
While you have the timestamp, cross-check if you are getting the correct time.
i am working on javascript. and i have time in milliseconds. so i have to display the time in PST time Zone. i have tried for GMT. but is there any option to display the time in PST format in which the input is in milliseconds like 1671673550214. so iam trying to convert this milliseconds to time and date format of PST. same as the below code does. pleas help.
Here is my tried code:
var time = new Date().getTime();
var date = new Date(time);
document.write(date.toString());
i have even tried of using UTCString(), UTC() and toString(); but things is getting converted to GMT and not to PST.
Please check this library, it has lot of functions to display and manupilate date time.
http://momentjs.com/
http://momentjs.com/docs/
Also please check following post
Moment.js: Format date in a specific timezone\
If you dont want to use external lib, see the following article
http://www.techrepublic.com/article/convert-the-local-time-to-another-time-zone-with-this-javascript/6016329
You can use timezonjs which help you to convert the time to any timezone.
https://github.com/mde/timezone-js