Javascript: formatting a date [duplicate] - javascript

This question already has answers here:
Where can I find documentation on formatting a date in JavaScript?
(39 answers)
Closed 4 years ago.
I want to the current date/time formatted in this format:
year+'-'+month+'-'+day+' '+hour+':'+minute+':'+second+':'+milli;
Currently I'm doing it as such. Is there a more elegant approach without the use of external libraries like moment.js?
var now = new Date();
var year = now.getFullYear();
var month = now.getMonth()+1;
var day = now.getDate();
var hour = now.getHours();
var minute = now.getMinutes();
var second = now.getSeconds();
var milli = now.getMilliseconds();
if(month.toString().length == 1) {
var month = '0'+month;
}
if(day.toString().length == 1) {
var day = '0'+day;
}
if(hour.toString().length == 1) {
var hour = '0'+hour;
}
if(minute.toString().length == 1) {
var minute = '0'+minute;
}
if(second.toString().length == 1) {
var second = '0'+second;
}
if(milli.toString().length == 1) {
var milli = '0'+milli;
}
var m_session_startTime = year+'-'+month+'-'+day+' '+hour+':'+minute+':'+second+':'+milli;

Leverage template literals instead of concatenation and padStart() to fill leading zeros.
const now = new Date();
const year = now.getFullYear();
const month = String(now.getMonth() + 1).padStart(2, "0");
const day = String(now.getDate()).padStart(2, "0");
const hour = String(now.getHours()).padStart(2, "0");
const minute = String(now.getMinutes()).padStart(2, "0");
const second = String(now.getSeconds()).padStart(2, "0");
const milli = String(now.getMilliseconds()).padStart(4, "0");
const m_session_startTime = `${year}-${month}-${day} ${hour}:${minute}:${second}:${milli}`;
console.log(m_session_startTime);

You could use moment.js, it really helps you with formatting dates.
console.log(moment().format('YYYY-MMMM-DD h:mm:ss:SSS'));
<script src="https://momentjs.com/downloads/moment.min.js"></script>
This command does the job pretty well. moment() is a date object, when there are no arguments given like in this example it takes the current time but you can also use moment("2018-12-4") for specific dates.
You can then format the date according to your need,
YYYY is the full year (2018)
MMMM is the full month name (July)
(you can also use MMM for the short version of the month name)
DD is the day as a number (24)
(you can also use dddd for the full name of the day or ddd for the short name)
h is the hour as number (22)
mm is the minute as a number (23)
ss is the second as a number (as an example 22)
SSS is the millisecond as a number (example 245)

Try this?
let date = new Date();
let jsonDate = date.toJSON();
jsonDate = jsonDate.replace(/[TZ]/g, " ");
jsonDate = jsonDate.replace(/\./g, ":");
console.log(jsonDate);
> 2018-07-24 20:32:06:435
Alternatively, if you want to split the entire thing into substrings:
let date = new Date();
let jsonDate = date.toJSON();
jsonDate = jsonDate.replace(/[TZ]/g, " ");
jsonDate = jsonDate.replace(/\./g, ":");
let dateTime = jsonDate.split(" ");
let dt = dateTime[0].split("-");
let tt = dateTime[1].split(":");
let year = dt[0];
let month = dt[1];
let day = dt[2];
let hour = tt[0];
let minute = tt[1];
let second = tt[2];
let mili = tt[3];
console.log(jsonDate);
console.log(dateTime[0]);
console.log(dateTime[1]);
console.log([year, month, day, hour, minute, second, mili].join("~"));
console.log("Date: " + [year, month, day].join("-") + " Time: " + [hour, minute, second, mili].join(":"));
> 2018-07-24 21:03:05:706
> 2018-07-24
> 21:03:05:706
> 2018~07~24~21~03~05~706
> Date: 2018-07-24 Time: 21:03:05:706
As you might have noticed from this response, I work with databases. I have heavy bash, javascript, php, sql, golang background.

Use a moment.js. Great library that is designed to exactly what you would like. You can use the .format option.
var now = moment().format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss.SSS');
$('#timeval').text(now);
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
Current Time: <br>
<a id="timeval"></a>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.22.2/moment.min.js"></script>
https://momentjs.com/

Related

Add trailing zero in time format in jquery [duplicate]

I've created this script to calculate the date for 10 days in advance in the format of dd/mm/yyyy:
var MyDate = new Date();
var MyDateString = new Date();
MyDate.setDate(MyDate.getDate()+10);
MyDateString = MyDate.getDate() + '/' + (MyDate.getMonth()+1) + '/' + MyDate.getFullYear();
I need to have the date appear with leading zeroes on the day and month component by way of adding these rules to the script. I can't seem to get it to work.
if (MyDate.getMonth < 10)getMonth = '0' + getMonth;
and
if (MyDate.getDate <10)get.Date = '0' + getDate;
If someone could show me where to insert these into the script I would be really appreciative.
Try this: http://jsfiddle.net/xA5B7/
var MyDate = new Date();
var MyDateString;
MyDate.setDate(MyDate.getDate() + 20);
MyDateString = ('0' + MyDate.getDate()).slice(-2) + '/'
+ ('0' + (MyDate.getMonth()+1)).slice(-2) + '/'
+ MyDate.getFullYear();
EDIT:
To explain, .slice(-2) gives us the last two characters of the string.
So no matter what, we can add "0" to the day or month, and just ask for the last two since those are always the two we want.
So if the MyDate.getMonth() returns 9, it will be:
("0" + "9") // Giving us "09"
so adding .slice(-2) on that gives us the last two characters which is:
("0" + "9").slice(-2)
"09"
But if MyDate.getMonth() returns 10, it will be:
("0" + "10") // Giving us "010"
so adding .slice(-2) gives us the last two characters, or:
("0" + "10").slice(-2)
"10"
The modern way
The new modern way to do this is to use toLocaleDateString, because it allows you not only to format a date with proper localization, but even to pass format options to achieve the desired result:
const date = new Date(2018, 2, 1)
const result = date.toLocaleDateString("en-GB", { // you can use undefined as first argument
year: "numeric",
month: "2-digit",
day: "2-digit",
})
console.log(result) // outputs “01/03/2018”
Or using a Temporal object (still in proposal, caniuse):
const date = new Temporal.PlainDate(2018, 3, 1) // also works with zoned date
const result = date.toLocaleString("en-GB", { // you can use undefined as first argument
year: "numeric",
month: "2-digit",
day: "2-digit",
})
console.log(result) // outputs “01/03/2018”
When you use undefined as the first argument it will detect the browser language, instead. Alternatively, you can use 2-digit on the year option, too.
Performance
If you plan to format a lot of dates, you should consider using Intl.DateTimeFormat instead:
const formatter = new Intl.DateTimeFormat("en-GB", { // <- re-use me
year: "numeric",
month: "2-digit",
day: "2-digit",
})
const date = new Date(2018, 2, 1) // can also be a Temporal object
const result = formatter.format(date)
console.log(result) // outputs “01/03/2018”
The formatter is compatible with Date and Temporal objects.
Historical dates
Unlike in the Temporal constructor years between 0 and 99 will be interpreted as 20th century years on the Date constructor. To prevent this, initialize the date like so:
const date = new Date()
date.setFullYear(18, 2, 1) // the year is A.D. 18
This is not required for Temporal objects, but years below 1000 will not contain leading zeros in all cases, because the formatter (that is shared for the Date and Temporal API) does not support 4-digit formatting at all. In this case you have to do manual formatting (see below).
For the ISO 8601 format
If you want to get your date in the YYYY-MM-DD format (ISO 8601), the solution looks different:
const date = new Date(Date.UTC(2018, 2, 1))
const result = date.toISOString().split('T')[0]
console.log(result) // outputs “2018-03-01”
Your input date should be in the UTC format or toISOString() will fix that for you. This is done by using Date.UTC as shown above.
Historical dates for the ISO 8601 format
Unlike in the Temporal constructor years between 0 and 99 will be interpreted as 20th century years on the Date constructor. To prevent this, initialize the date like so to be used for the ISO 8601 format:
const date = new Date()
date.setUTCFullYear(18, 2, 1) // the year is A.D. 18
Note that the ISO format for Temporal objects with dates before the year 1000 or after the year 9999 will have a different formatting compared to the legacy Date API. It is recommend to fallback to custom formatting to enforce 4 digit years in all circumstances.
Custom 4-digit formatting on the year
Sadly, the formatter doesn't support leading zeros on the year. There is no 4-digit option. This will remain for Temporal objects as well, because they do share the same formatter.
Fortunately, the ISO format of the Date API will always display at least 4 digits on the year, although Temporal objects do not. So at least for the Date API you can format historical dates before the year 1000 with leading zeros by falling back to a manual formatting approach using part of the ISO 8601 format method:
const date = new Date()
date.setUTCFullYear(18, 2, 1)
const ymd = date.toISOString().split('T')[0].split('-')
const result = `${ymd[2]}/${ymd[1]}/${ymd[0]}`
console.log(result) // outputs “01/03/0018”
For a Temporal object a different route is necessary, since the ISOYearString will be formatted differently for dates before the year 1000 and after the year 9999 as mentioned before:
const date = new Temporal.PlainDate(2018, 3, 1) // also works with zoned date
const zeroPad = (n, digits) => n.toString().padStart(digits, '0');
const result = `${zeroPad(date.day, 2)}/${zeroPad(date.month, 2)}/${zeroPad(date.year, 4)}`;
console.log(result) // outputs “01/03/0018”
Miscellaneous
For the Date and Temporal API there is also toLocaleTimeString, that allows you to localize and format the time of a date.
Here is an example from the Date object docs on the Mozilla Developer Network using a custom "pad" function, without having to extend Javascript's Number prototype. The handy function they give as an example is
function pad(n){return n<10 ? '0'+n : n}
And below is it being used in context.
/* use a function for the exact format desired... */
function ISODateString(d){
function pad(n){return n<10 ? '0'+n : n}
return d.getUTCFullYear()+'-'
+ pad(d.getUTCMonth()+1)+'-'
+ pad(d.getUTCDate())+'T'
+ pad(d.getUTCHours())+':'
+ pad(d.getUTCMinutes())+':'
+ pad(d.getUTCSeconds())+'Z'
}
var d = new Date();
console.log(ISODateString(d)); // prints something like 2009-09-28T19:03:12Z
For you people from the future (ECMAScript 2017 and beyond)
Solution
"use strict"
const today = new Date()
const year = today.getFullYear()
const month = `${today.getMonth() + 1}`.padStart(2, "0")
const day = `${today.getDate()}`.padStart(2, "0")
const stringDate = [day, month, year].join("/") // 13/12/2017
Explaination
the String.prototype.padStart(targetLength[, padString]) adds as many as possible padString in the String.prototype target so that the new length of the target is targetLength.
Example
"use strict"
let month = "9"
month = month.padStart(2, "0") // "09"
let byte = "00000100"
byte = byte.padStart(8, "0") // "00000100"
You can define a "str_pad" function (as in php):
function str_pad(n) {
return String("00" + n).slice(-2);
}
I found the shorterst way to do this:
MyDateString.replace(/(^|\D)(\d)(?!\d)/g, '$10$2');
will add leading zeros to all lonely, single digits
Number.prototype.padZero= function(len){
var s= String(this), c= '0';
len= len || 2;
while(s.length < len) s= c + s;
return s;
}
//in use:
(function(){
var myDate= new Date(), myDateString;
myDate.setDate(myDate.getDate()+10);
myDateString= [myDate.getDate().padZero(),
(myDate.getMonth()+1).padZero(),
myDate.getFullYear()].join('/');
alert(myDateString);
})()
/* value: (String)
09/09/2010
*/
Nowadays you can also utilize String.prototype.padStart to reach the goal in quick and easy way
String(new Date().getMonth() + 1).padStart(2, '0')
The availability can be assessed at caniuse
var date = new Date()
var year = date.getFullYear()
var month = String(date.getMonth() + 1).padStart(2, '0')
var day = String(date.getDate()).padStart(2, '0')
console.log('%s/%s/%s', month, day, year)
Check
var date = new Date('7/4/2021')
var year = date.getFullYear()
var month = String(date.getMonth() + 1).padStart(2, '0')
var day = String(date.getDate()).padStart(2, '0')
/**
* Expected output: 07/04/2021
*/
console.log('%s/%s/%s', month, day, year)
Polyfill for old browsers
String.prototype.padStart || Object.defineProperty(String.prototype, 'padStart', {
configurable : true,
writable : true,
value : function (targetLength, padString) {
'use strict'
/**
* String.prototype.padStart polyfill
* https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3605214/javascript-add-leading-zeroes-to-date
*/
targetLength = targetLength | 0
padString = arguments.length > 1 ? String(padString) : ' '
if (this.length < targetLength && padString.length) {
targetLength = targetLength - this.length
while (padString.length < targetLength) {
padString += padString
}
return padString.slice(0, targetLength) + this
} else {
return this
}
}
})
var MyDate = new Date();
var MyDateString = '';
MyDate.setDate(MyDate.getDate());
var tempoMonth = (MyDate.getMonth()+1);
var tempoDate = (MyDate.getDate());
if (tempoMonth < 10) tempoMonth = '0' + tempoMonth;
if (tempoDate < 10) tempoDate = '0' + tempoDate;
MyDateString = tempoDate + '/' + tempoMonth + '/' + MyDate.getFullYear();
There is another approach to solve this problem, using slice in JavaScript.
var d = new Date();
var datestring = d.getFullYear() + "-" + ("0"+(d.getMonth()+1)).slice(-2) +"-"+("0" + d.getDate()).slice(-2);
the datestring return date with format as you expect: 2019-09-01
another approach is using dateformat library: https://github.com/felixge/node-dateformat
You could use ternary operator to format the date like an "if" statement.
For example:
var MyDate = new Date();
MyDate.setDate(MyDate.getDate()+10);
var MyDateString = (MyDate.getDate() < 10 ? '0' + MyDate.getDate() : MyDate.getDate()) + '/' + ((d.getMonth()+1) < 10 ? '0' + (d.getMonth()+1) : (d.getMonth()+1)) + '/' + MyDate.getFullYear();
So
(MyDate.getDate() < 10 ? '0' + MyDate.getDate() : MyDate.getDate())
would be similar to an if statement, where if the getDate() returns a value less than 10, then return a '0' + the Date, or else return the date if greater than 10 (since we do not need to add the leading 0). Same for the month.
Edit:
Forgot that getMonth starts with 0, so added the +1 to account for it. Of course you could also just say d.getMonth() < 9 :, but I figured using the +1 would help make it easier to understand.
function formatDate(jsDate){
// add leading zeroes to jsDate when days or months are < 10..
// i.e.
// formatDate(new Date("1/3/2013"));
// returns
// "01/03/2103"
////////////////////
return (jsDate.getDate()<10?("0"+jsDate.getDate()):jsDate.getDate()) + "/" +
((jsDate.getMonth()+1)<10?("0"+(jsDate.getMonth()+1)):(jsDate.getMonth()+1)) + "/" +
jsDate.getFullYear();
}
You can provide options as a parameter to format date. First parameter is for locale which you might not need and second is for options.
For more info visit
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/toLocaleDateString
var date = new Date(Date.UTC(2012, 1, 1, 3, 0, 0));
var options = { year: 'numeric', month: '2-digit', day: '2-digit' };
console.log(date.toLocaleDateString(undefined,options));
I wrapped the correct answer of this question in a function that can add multiple leading zero's but defaults to adding 1 zero.
function zeroFill(nr, depth){
depth = (depth === undefined)? 1 : depth;
var zero = "0";
for (var i = 0; i < depth; ++i) {
zero += "0";
}
return (zero + nr).slice(-(depth + 1));
}
for working with numbers only and not more than 2 digits, this is also an approach:
function zeroFill(i) {
return (i < 10 ? '0' : '') + i
}
Another option, using a built-in function to do the padding (but resulting in quite long code!):
myDateString = myDate.getDate().toLocaleString('en-US', {minimumIntegerDigits: 2})
+ '/' + (myDate.getMonth()+1).toLocaleString('en-US', {minimumIntegerDigits: 2})
+ '/' + myDate.getFullYear();
// '12/06/2017'
And another, manipulating strings with regular expressions:
var myDateString = myDate.toISOString().replace(/T.*/, '').replace(/-/g, '/');
// '2017/06/12'
But be aware that one will show the year at the start and the day at the end.
Adding on to #modiX answer, this is what works...DO NOT LEAVE THAT as empty
today.toLocaleDateString("default", {year: "numeric", month: "2-digit", day: "2-digit"})
Here is very simple example how you can handle this situation.
var mydate = new Date();
var month = (mydate.getMonth().toString().length < 2 ? "0"+mydate.getMonth().toString() :mydate.getMonth());
var date = (mydate.getDate().toString().length < 2 ? "0"+mydate.getDate().toString() :mydate.getDate());
var year = mydate.getFullYear();
console.log("Format Y-m-d : ",year+"-"+month+"-" + date);
console.log("Format Y/m/d : ",year+"/"+month+"/" + date);
I think this solution is easier and can be easily remembered:
var MyDate = new Date();
var day = MyDate.getDate() + 10; // 10 days in advance
var month = MyDate.getMonth() + 1; // since months start from 0 we should add 1 to it
var year = MyDate.getFullYear();
day = checkDate(day);
month = checkDate(month);
function checkDate(i){
if(i < 10){
i = '0' + i;
}
return i;
}
console.log(`${month}/${day}/${year}`);
What I would do, is create my own custom Date helper that looks like this :
var DateHelper = {
addDays : function(aDate, numberOfDays) {
aDate.setDate(aDate.getDate() + numberOfDays); // Add numberOfDays
return aDate; // Return the date
},
format : function format(date) {
return [
("0" + date.getDate()).slice(-2), // Get day and pad it with zeroes
("0" + (date.getMonth()+1)).slice(-2), // Get month and pad it with zeroes
date.getFullYear() // Get full year
].join('/'); // Glue the pieces together
}
}
// With this helper, you can now just use one line of readable code to :
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------
// 1. Get the current date
// 2. Add 20 days
// 3. Format it
// 4. Output it
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------
document.body.innerHTML = DateHelper.format(DateHelper.addDays(new Date(), 20));
(see also this Fiddle)
As #John Henckel suggests, starting using the toISOString() method makes things easier
const dateString = new Date().toISOString().split('-');
const year = dateString[0];
const month = dateString[1];
const day = dateString[2].split('T')[0];
console.log(`${year}-${month}-${day}`);
try this for a basic function, no libraries required
Date.prototype.CustomformatDate = function() {
var tmp = new Date(this.valueOf());
var mm = tmp.getMonth() + 1;
if (mm < 10) mm = "0" + mm;
var dd = tmp.getDate();
if (dd < 10) dd = "0" + dd;
return mm + "/" + dd + "/" + tmp.getFullYear();
};
You could simply use :
const d = new Date();
const day = `0${d.getDate()}`.slice(-2);
So a function could be created like :
AddZero(val){
// adding 0 if the value is a single digit
return `0${val}`.slice(-2);
}
Your new code :
var MyDate = new Date();
var MyDateString = new Date();
MyDate.setDate(MyDate.getDate()+10);
MyDateString = AddZero(MyDate.getDate()) + '/' + AddZero(MyDate.getMonth() + 1) + '/' + MyDate.getFullYear();
toISOString can get leading 0
const currentdate = new Date();
const date = new Date(Date.UTC(currentdate.getFullYear(), (currentdate.getMonth()),currentdate.getDate(), currentdate.getHours(), currentdate.getMinutes(), currentdate.getSeconds()));
//you can pass YY, MM, DD //op: 2018-03-01
//i have passed YY, MM, DD, HH, Min, Sec // op : 2021-06-09T12:14:27.000Z
console.log(date.toISOString());
output will be similar to this : 2021-06-09T12:14:27.000Z
const month = date.toLocaleDateString('en-US', { month: '2-digit' });
const day = date.toLocaleDateString('en-US', { day: '2-digit' });
const year = date.getFullYear();
const dateString = `${month}-${day}-${year}`;
The following aims to extract configuration, hook into Date.protoype and apply configuration.
I've used an Array to store time chunks and when I push() this as a Date object, it returns me the length to iterate. When I'm done, I can use join on the return value.
This seems to work pretty fast: 0.016ms
// Date protoype
Date.prototype.formatTime = function (options) {
var i = 0,
time = [],
len = time.push(this.getHours(), this.getMinutes(), this.getSeconds());
for (; i < len; i += 1) {
var tick = time[i];
time[i] = tick < 10 ? options.pad + tick : tick;
}
return time.join(options.separator);
};
// Setup output
var cfg = {
fieldClock: "#fieldClock",
options: {
pad: "0",
separator: ":",
tick: 1000
}
};
// Define functionality
function startTime() {
var clock = $(cfg.fieldClock),
now = new Date().formatTime(cfg.options);
clock.val(now);
setTimeout(startTime, cfg.options.tick);
}
// Run once
startTime();
demo: http://jsfiddle.net/tive/U4MZ3/
Add some padding to allow a leading zero - where needed - and concatenate using your delimiter of choice as string.
Number.prototype.padLeft = function(base,chr){
var len = (String(base || 10).length - String(this).length)+1;
return len > 0? new Array(len).join(chr || '0')+this : this;
}
var d = new Date(my_date);
var dformatted = [(d.getMonth()+1).padLeft(), d.getDate().padLeft(), d.getFullYear()].join('/');
let date = new Date();
let dd = date.getDate();//day of month
let mm = date.getMonth();// month
let yyyy = date.getFullYear();//day of week
if (dd < 10) {//if less then 10 add a leading zero
dd = "0" + dd;
}
if (mm < 10) {
mm = "0" + mm;//if less then 10 add a leading zero
}
function pad(value) {
return value.tostring().padstart(2, 0);
}
let d = new date();
console.log(d);
console.log(`${d.getfullyear()}-${pad(d.getmonth() + 1)}-${pad(d.getdate())}t${pad(d.gethours())}:${pad(d.getminutes())}:${pad(d.getseconds())}`);
You can use String.slice() which extracts a section of a string and returns it as a new string, without modifying the original string:
const currentDate = new Date().toISOString().slice(0, 10) // 2020-04-16
Or you can also use a lib such as Moment.js to format the date:
const moment = require("moment")
const currentDate = moment().format("YYYY-MM-DD") // 2020-04-16
A simple dateformat library saved my life (GitHub):
Node.js: var dateFormat = require("dateformat");
ES6: import dateFormat from "dateformat";
const now = new Date(); // consider 3rd of December 1993
const full = dateFormat(today, "yyyy-mm-dd"); // 1993-12-03
const day = dateFormat(today, "dd"); // 03
const month = dateFormat(today, "mm"); // 12
const year = dateFormat(today, "yyyy"); // 1993
It's worth to mention it supports a wide range of mask options.

JavaScript - Trying to set tomorrow's date using the code below [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How do I format a date in JavaScript?
(68 answers)
Closed 2 years ago.
var today = new Date();
var tomorrow = today.setDate(today.getDate() + 1)
console.log(tomorrow)
1596607917318
I am getting 13 digit number after using setDate(). How can I get the date in 2 digit format?
Date outputs in JS often need some manual processing to be exactly what you want. Try this:
// Create new Date instance
var today = new Date();
var tomorrow = today;
// Add a day
tomorrow.setDate(tomorrow.getDate() + 1)
console.log(formatDateToString(tomorrow));
function formatDateToString(date) {
var dd = (date.getDate() < 10 ? '0' : '')
+ date.getDate();
var MM = ((date.getMonth() + 1) < 10 ? '0' : '')
+ (date.getMonth() + 1);
return dd + "/" + MM;
}
The Date object has different methods that you can use to get certain parts of the timestamp.
// for day-month (i.e.: Oct 31 is 31-10
let formatted = `${tomorrow.getDate()}-${tomorrow.getMonth() + 1}`
See more: https://www.w3schools.com/js/js_date_formats.asp
setDate has changed the date of today.
Therefore output today and don't assign what's returned by setDate.
var today = new Date();
today.setDate(today.getDate() + 1);
console.log(today.toLocaleDateString());
Month is zero based so getMonth() + 1 returns this month, getDate() + 1 returns tomorrow.
var fecha = new Date();
var year = fecha.getFullYear();
var mes = fecha.getMonth() + 1;
var dia = fecha.getDate() + 1;
var hora = fecha.getHours();
var minutos = fecha.getMinutes();
var segundos = fecha.getSeconds();
var output = `Date: ${dia}/${mes}/${year}`+ '\n' + `Time: ${hora}:${minutos}:${segundos}`;
console.log(output)
Nice question, I recently had to do something similar in VB. Here is a simple javascript version, based on your code:
//this gets the date today
var today = new Date();
//we add one, to get the date tomorrow
var tomorrow = today.getDate() + 1
//if tomorrow is a single digit number, we just pad it with a zero
if (tomorrow < 10)
{
tomorrow = '0' + tomorrow
}
//write to the console
console.log(tomorrow)

Javascript timstamp function one liner

In java this is my one liner to create a timestamp function with flexible formats:
String timestamp() {
Calendar now = Calendar.getInstance();
return String.format("%1$ty%1$tm%1$td_%1$tH%1$tM%1$tS", now);
}
What is the equivalent in javascript?
Here is JSFiddle for it: jsfiddle.net/9kpea998
(Yes I know there is moment.js)
The simpler solution using the lowest amount of code is:
function timestamp() {
return new Date().toISOString();
}
document.write(timestamp());
but you don't have access to custom formatting.
If you want the exact formatting used in the question, you could use this longer version:
function timestamp() {
var date = new Date();
var year = date.getFullYear();
var month = date.getMonth();
var day = date.getDate();
var hour = date.getHours();
var minute = date.getMinutes();
var second = date.getSeconds();
year = year.toString().substr(2);
month = ("00" + month).substr(-2,2);
day = ("00" + day).substr(-2,2);
var timestamp =
year + month + day + "_" +
hour + minute + second;
return timestamp;
}
document.write(timestamp());
Edit:
You can use regex to format the standard ISO string a little more like this:
function timestamp() {
return new Date().toISOString().replace(/([-:]|\..+)/g, "").replace("T", "_");
}
document.write(timestamp());

how to get getUTCDate() with 0

how to get getUTCDate() and getUTCMonth() with 0 ?
my code is
var d = new Date();
var day = d.getUTCDate();
var month = d.getUTCMonth()+1;
var year = d.getUTCFullYear();
If Today date is 1-1-2015 than i want to day=01 instead of 1 and month=01 instead of 1;
There's no built-in shortcut for doing that. You just put a 0 in front of it if necessary:
var month = String(d.getUTCMonth());
if (month.length === 1) {
month = "0" + month;
}
Or use a date/time library like MomentJS which features formatting functions.
On modern browsers, you can also dice up the string toISOString gives you, as it's always in UTC:
var parts = d.toISOString().substring(0, 10).split("-");
var day = parts[2];
var month = parts[1];
var year = parts[0];

Change date format (Javascript)

I have this code:
var fd=1+self.theDate.getMonth() +'/'+ today+'/'+self.theDate.getFullYear();
It works, but it's format is Month, Day, Year.
I need to change it to: Day, Month Year.
So, I tried this:
var fd=1+today +'/'+ self.theDate.getMonth()+'/'+self.theDate.getFullYear();
Now, my change does not work. Is it that I have not done it properly or is my change right?
Thanks
I expect the correct answer is this:
var fd=today +'/'+ (self.theDate.getMonth() + 1) +'/'+self.theDate.getFullYear();
This leaves today alone, and groups Month so that it does a proper number addition instead of string concatenation.
var theDate = new Date();
var today = theDate.getDate();
var month = theDate.getMonth()+1; // js months are 0 based
var year = theDate.getFullYear();
var fd=today +'/'+ month +'/'+year
or perhaps you prefer 22/05/2011
var theDate = new Date();
var today = theDate.getDate();
if (today<10) today="0"+today;
var month = theDate.getMonth()+1; // js months are 0 based
if (month < 10) month = "0"+month;
var year = theDate.getFullYear();
var fd=""+today +"/"+ month +"/"+year
You are no longer adding 1 to the month, you are adding it to today. Make sure to parenthesize this since "x" + 1 + 2 => "x12" but "x" + (1 + 2) => "x3"

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