Convert UTC Epoch to local date - javascript

I have been fighting with this for a bit now. I’m trying to convert epoch to a date object. The epoch is sent to me in UTC. Whenever you pass new Date() an epoch, it assumes it’s local epoch. I tried creating a UTC object, then using setTime() to adjust it to the proper epoch, but the only method that seems useful is toUTCString() and strings don’t help me. If I pass that string into a new date, it should notice that it’s UTC, but it doesn’t.
new Date( new Date().toUTCString() ).toLocaleString()
My next attempt was to try to get the difference between local current epoch and UTC current epoch, but I wasn’t able to get that either.
new Date( new Date().toUTCString() ).getTime() - new Date().getTime()
It’s only giving me very small differences, under 1000, which is in milliseconds.
Any suggestions?

I think I have a simpler solution -- set the initial date to the epoch and add UTC units. Say you have a UTC epoch var stored in seconds. How about 1234567890. To convert that to a proper date in the local time zone:
var utcSeconds = 1234567890;
var d = new Date(0); // The 0 there is the key, which sets the date to the epoch
d.setUTCSeconds(utcSeconds);
d is now a date (in my time zone) set to Fri Feb 13 2009 18:31:30 GMT-0500 (EST)

It's easy, new Date() just takes milliseconds, e.g.
new Date(1394104654000)
> Thu Mar 06 2014 06:17:34 GMT-0500 (EST)

And just for the logs, I did this using Moment.js library, which I was using for formatting anyway.
moment.utc(1234567890000).local()
>Fri Feb 13 2009 19:01:30 GMT-0430 (VET)

Epoch time is in seconds from Jan. 1, 1970. date.getTime() returns milliseconds from Jan. 1, 1970, so.. if you have an epoch timestamp, convert it to a javascript timestamp by multiplying by 1000.
function epochToJsDate(ts){
// ts = epoch timestamp
// returns date obj
return new Date(ts*1000);
}
function jsDateToEpoch(d){
// d = javascript date obj
// returns epoch timestamp
return (d.getTime()-d.getMilliseconds())/1000;
}

function ToLocalDate (inDate) {
var date = new Date();
date.setTime(inDate.valueOf() - 60000 * inDate.getTimezoneOffset());
return date;
}

Epoch time (i.e. Unix Epoch time) is nearly always the number of seconds that have expired since 1st Jan 1970 00:00:00 (UTC time), not the number of milliseconds which some of the answers here have implied.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_time
Therefore, if you have been given a Unix Epoch time value it will probably be in seconds, and will look something like 1547035195. If you want to make this human readable in JavaScript, you need to convert the value to milliseconds, and pass that value into the Date(value) constructor, e.g.:
const unixEpochTimeMS = 1547035195 * 1000;
const d = new Date(unixEpochTimeMS);
// Careful, the string output here can vary by implementation...
const strDate = d.toLocaleString();
You don't need to do the d.setUTCMilliseconds(0) step in the accepted answer because the JavaScript Date(value) constructor takes a UTC value in milliseconds (not a local time).
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date#Syntax
Also note that you should avoid using the Date(...) constructor that takes a string datetime representation, this is not recommended (see the link above).

var myDate = new Date( your epoch date *1000);
source - https://www.epochconverter.com/programming/#javascript

To convert the current epoch time in [ms] to a 24-hour time. You might need to specify the option to disable 12-hour format.
$ node.exe -e "var date = new Date(Date.now()); console.log(date.toLocaleString('en-GB', { hour12:false } ));"
2/7/2018, 19:35:24
or as JS:
var date = new Date(Date.now());
console.log(date.toLocaleString('en-GB', { hour12:false } ));
// 2/7/2018, 19:35:24
console.log(date.toLocaleString('en-GB', { hour:'numeric', minute:'numeric', second:'numeric', hour12:false } ));
// 19:35:24
Note: The use of en-GB here, is just a (random) choice of a place using the 24 hour format, it is not your timezone!

Addition to the above answer by #djechlin
d = '1394104654000';
new Date(parseInt(d));
converts EPOCH time to human readable date. Just don't forget that type of EPOCH time must be an Integer.

The Easiest Way
If you have the unix epoch in milliseconds, in my case - 1601209912824
convert it into a Date Object as so
const dateObject = new Date(milliseconds)
const humanDateFormat = dateObject.toString()
output -
Sun Sep 27 2020 18:01:52 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time)
if you want the date in UTC -
const dateObject = new Date(milliseconds)
const humanDateFormat = dateObject.toUTCString()
Now you can format it as you please.

Considering, you have epoch_time available,
// for eg. epoch_time = 1487086694.213
var date = new Date(epoch_time * 1000); // multiply by 1000 for milliseconds
var date_string = date.toLocaleString('en-GB'); // 24 hour format

The simplest solution I've found to this, is:
var timestamp = Date.now(), // returns milliseconds since epoch time
normalisedTime = new Date(timestamp);
Notice this doesn't have the * 1000 at the end of new Date(timestamp) statement as this (for me anyway!) always seems to give out the wrong date, ie instead of giving the year 2019 it gives the year as 51015, so just bear that in mind.

EDIT
var utcDate = new Date(incomingUTCepoch);
var date = new Date();
date.setUTCDate(utcDate.getDate());
date.setUTCHours(utcDate.getHours());
date.setUTCMonth(utcDate.getMonth());
date.setUTCMinutes(utcDate.getMinutes());
date.setUTCSeconds(utcDate.getSeconds());
date.setUTCMilliseconds(utcDate.getMilliseconds());
EDIT fixed

Are you just asking to convert a UTC string to a "local" string? You could do:
var utc_string = '2011-09-05 20:05:15';
var local_string = (function(dtstr) {
var t0 = new Date(dtstr);
var t1 = Date.parse(t0.toUTCString().replace('GMT', ''));
var t2 = (2 * t0) - t1;
return new Date(t2).toString();
})(utc_string);

If you prefer to resolve timestamps and dates conversions from and to UTC and local time without libraries like moment.js, take a look at the option below.
For applications that use UTC timestamps, you may need to show the date in the browser considering the local timezone and daylight savings when applicable. Editing a date that is in a different daylight savings time even though in the same timezone can be tricky.
The Number and Date extensions below allow you to show and get dates in the timezone of the timestamps. For example, lets say you are in Vancouver, if you are editing a date in July or in December, it can mean you are editing a date in PST or PDT.
I recommend you to check the Code Snippet down below to test this solution.
Conversions from milliseconds
Number.prototype.toLocalDate = function () {
var value = new Date(this);
value.setHours(value.getHours() + (value.getTimezoneOffset() / 60));
return value;
};
Number.prototype.toUTCDate = function () {
var value = new Date(this);
value.setHours(value.getHours() - (value.getTimezoneOffset() / 60));
return value;
};
Conversions from dates
Date.prototype.getUTCTime = function () {
return this.getTime() - (this.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000);
};
Usage
// Adds the timezone and daylight savings if applicable
(1499670000000).toLocalDate();
// Eliminates the timezone and daylight savings if applicable
new Date(2017, 6, 10).getUTCTime();
See it for yourself
// Extending Number
Number.prototype.toLocalDate = function () {
var value = new Date(this);
value.setHours(value.getHours() + (value.getTimezoneOffset() / 60));
return value;
};
Number.prototype.toUTCDate = function () {
var value = new Date(this);
value.setHours(value.getHours() - (value.getTimezoneOffset() / 60));
return value;
};
// Extending Date
Date.prototype.getUTCTime = function () {
return this.getTime() - (this.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000);
};
// Getting the demo to work
document.getElementById('m-to-local-button').addEventListener('click', function () {
var displayElement = document.getElementById('m-to-local-display'),
value = document.getElementById('m-to-local').value,
milliseconds = parseInt(value);
if (typeof milliseconds === 'number')
displayElement.innerText = (milliseconds).toLocalDate().toISOString();
else
displayElement.innerText = 'Set a value';
}, false);
document.getElementById('m-to-utc-button').addEventListener('click', function () {
var displayElement = document.getElementById('m-to-utc-display'),
value = document.getElementById('m-to-utc').value,
milliseconds = parseInt(value);
if (typeof milliseconds === 'number')
displayElement.innerText = (milliseconds).toUTCDate().toISOString();
else
displayElement.innerText = 'Set a value';
}, false);
document.getElementById('date-to-utc-button').addEventListener('click', function () {
var displayElement = document.getElementById('date-to-utc-display'),
yearValue = document.getElementById('date-to-utc-year').value || '1970',
monthValue = document.getElementById('date-to-utc-month').value || '0',
dayValue = document.getElementById('date-to-utc-day').value || '1',
hourValue = document.getElementById('date-to-utc-hour').value || '0',
minuteValue = document.getElementById('date-to-utc-minute').value || '0',
secondValue = document.getElementById('date-to-utc-second').value || '0',
year = parseInt(yearValue),
month = parseInt(monthValue),
day = parseInt(dayValue),
hour = parseInt(hourValue),
minute = parseInt(minuteValue),
second = parseInt(secondValue);
displayElement.innerText = new Date(year, month, day, hour, minute, second).getUTCTime();
}, false);
<link href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/semantic-ui/2.2.11/semantic.css" rel="stylesheet"/>
<div class="ui container">
<p></p>
<h3>Milliseconds to local date</h3>
<input id="m-to-local" placeholder="Timestamp" value="0" /> <button id="m-to-local-button">Convert</button>
<em id="m-to-local-display">Set a value</em>
<h3>Milliseconds to UTC date</h3>
<input id="m-to-utc" placeholder="Timestamp" value="0" /> <button id="m-to-utc-button">Convert</button>
<em id="m-to-utc-display">Set a value</em>
<h3>Date to milliseconds in UTC</h3>
<input id="date-to-utc-year" placeholder="Year" style="width: 4em;" />
<input id="date-to-utc-month" placeholder="Month" style="width: 4em;" />
<input id="date-to-utc-day" placeholder="Day" style="width: 4em;" />
<input id="date-to-utc-hour" placeholder="Hour" style="width: 4em;" />
<input id="date-to-utc-minute" placeholder="Minute" style="width: 4em;" />
<input id="date-to-utc-second" placeholder="Second" style="width: 4em;" />
<button id="date-to-utc-button">Convert</button>
<em id="date-to-utc-display">Set the values</em>
</div>

#Amjad, good idea, but a better implementation would be:
Date.prototype.setUTCTime = function(UTCTimestamp) {
var UTCDate = new Date(UTCTimestamp);
this.setUTCFullYear(UTCDate.getFullYear(), UTCDate.getMonth(), UTCDate.getDate());
this.setUTCHours(UTCDate.getHours(), UTCDate.getMinutes(), UTCDate.getSeconds(), UTCDate.getMilliseconds());
return this.getTime();
}

Related

How to convert utc time to local time on frontend [duplicate]

From the server I get a datetime variable in this format: 6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM and it is in UTC time. I want to convert it to the current user’s browser time zone using JavaScript.
How this can be done using JavaScript or jQuery?
Append 'UTC' to the string before converting it to a date in javascript:
var date = new Date('6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM UTC');
date.toString() // "Wed Jun 29 2011 09:52:48 GMT-0700 (PDT)"
In my point of view servers should always in the general case return a datetime in the standardized ISO 8601-format.
More info here:
http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
IN this case the server would return '2011-06-29T16:52:48.000Z' which would feed directly into the JS Date object.
var utcDate = '2011-06-29T16:52:48.000Z'; // ISO-8601 formatted date returned from server
var localDate = new Date(utcDate);
The localDate will be in the right local time which in my case would be two hours later (DK time).
You really don't have to do all this parsing which just complicates stuff, as long as you are consistent with what format to expect from the server.
This is an universal solution:
function convertUTCDateToLocalDate(date) {
var newDate = new Date(date.getTime()+date.getTimezoneOffset()*60*1000);
var offset = date.getTimezoneOffset() / 60;
var hours = date.getHours();
newDate.setHours(hours - offset);
return newDate;
}
Usage:
var date = convertUTCDateToLocalDate(new Date(date_string_you_received));
Display the date based on the client local setting:
date.toLocaleString();
For me above solutions didn't work.
With IE the UTC date-time conversion to local is little tricky.
For me, the date-time from web API is '2018-02-15T05:37:26.007' and I wanted to convert as per local timezone so I used below code in JavaScript.
var createdDateTime = new Date('2018-02-15T05:37:26.007' + 'Z');
You should get the (UTC) offset (in minutes) of the client:
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
And then do the correspondent adding or substraction to the time you get from the server.
Hope this helps.
This works for me:
function convertUTCDateToLocalDate(date) {
var newDate = new Date(date.getTime() - date.getTimezoneOffset()*60*1000);
return newDate;
}
Put this function in your head:
<script type="text/javascript">
function localize(t)
{
var d=new Date(t+" UTC");
document.write(d.toString());
}
</script>
Then generate the following for each date in the body of your page:
<script type="text/javascript">localize("6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM");</script>
To remove the GMT and time zone, change the following line:
document.write(d.toString().replace(/GMT.*/g,""));
This is a simplified solution based on Adorjan Princ´s answer:
function convertUTCDateToLocalDate(date) {
var newDate = new Date(date);
newDate.setMinutes(date.getMinutes() - date.getTimezoneOffset());
return newDate;
}
or simpler (though it mutates the original date):
function convertUTCDateToLocalDate(date) {
date.setMinutes(date.getMinutes() - date.getTimezoneOffset());
return date;
}
Usage:
var date = convertUTCDateToLocalDate(new Date(date_string_you_received));
After trying a few others posted here without good results, this seemed to work for me:
convertUTCDateToLocalDate: function (date) {
return new Date(Date.UTC(date.getFullYear(), date.getMonth(), date.getDate(), date.getHours(), date.getMinutes(), date.getSeconds()));
}
And this works to go the opposite way, from Local Date to UTC:
convertLocalDatetoUTCDate: function(date){
return new Date(date.getUTCFullYear(), date.getUTCMonth(), date.getUTCDate(), date.getUTCHours(), date.getUTCMinutes(), date.getUTCSeconds());
}
Add the time zone at the end, in this case 'UTC':
theDate = new Date( Date.parse('6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM UTC'));
after that, use toLocale()* function families to display the date in the correct locale
theDate.toLocaleString(); // "6/29/2011, 9:52:48 AM"
theDate.toLocaleTimeString(); // "9:52:48 AM"
theDate.toLocaleDateString(); // "6/29/2011"
if you have
"2021-12-28T18:00:45.959Z" format
you can use this in js :
// myDateTime is 2021-12-28T18:00:45.959Z
myDate = new Date(myDateTime).toLocaleDateString('en-US');
// myDate is 12/28/2021
myTime = new Date(myDateTime).toLocaleTimeString('en-US');
// myTime is 9:30:45 PM
you just have to put your area string instead of "en-US" (e.g. "fa-IR").
also you can use options for toLocaleTimeString like { hour: '2-digit', minute: '2-digit' }
myTime = new Date(myDateTime).toLocaleTimeString('en-US',{ hour: '2-digit', minute: '2-digit' });
// myTime is 09:30 PM
more information for toLocaleTimeString and toLocaleDateString
Use this for UTC and Local time convert and vice versa.
//Covert datetime by GMT offset
//If toUTC is true then return UTC time other wise return local time
function convertLocalDateToUTCDate(date, toUTC) {
date = new Date(date);
//Local time converted to UTC
console.log("Time: " + date);
var localOffset = date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000;
var localTime = date.getTime();
if (toUTC) {
date = localTime + localOffset;
} else {
date = localTime - localOffset;
}
date = new Date(date);
console.log("Converted time: " + date);
return date;
}
Matt's answer is missing the fact that the daylight savings time could be different between Date() and the date time it needs to convert - here is my solution:
function ConvertUTCTimeToLocalTime(UTCDateString)
{
var convertdLocalTime = new Date(UTCDateString);
var hourOffset = convertdLocalTime.getTimezoneOffset() / 60;
convertdLocalTime.setHours( convertdLocalTime.getHours() + hourOffset );
return convertdLocalTime;
}
And the results in the debugger:
UTCDateString: "2014-02-26T00:00:00"
convertdLocalTime: Wed Feb 26 2014 00:00:00 GMT-0800 (Pacific Standard Time)
In case you don't mind usingmoment.js and your time is in UTC just use the following:
moment.utc('6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM').toDate();
if your time is not in utc but any other locale known to you, then use following:
moment('6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM', 'MM-DD-YYYY', 'fr').toDate();
if your time is already in local, then use following:
moment('6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM', 'MM-DD-YYYY');
To me the simplest seemed using
datetime.setUTCHours(datetime.getHours());
datetime.setUTCMinutes(datetime.getMinutes());
(i thought the first line could be enough but there are timezones which are off in fractions of hours)
This is what I'm doing to convert UTC to my Local Time:
const dataDate = '2020-09-15 07:08:08'
const utcDate = new Date(dataDate);
const myLocalDate = new Date(Date.UTC(
utcDate.getFullYear(),
utcDate.getMonth(),
utcDate.getDate(),
utcDate.getHours(),
utcDate.getMinutes()
));
document.getElementById("dataDate").innerHTML = dataDate;
document.getElementById("myLocalDate").innerHTML = myLocalDate;
<p>UTC<p>
<p id="dataDate"></p>
<p>Local(GMT +7)<p>
<p id="myLocalDate"></p>
Result: Tue Sep 15 2020 14:08:00 GMT+0700 (Indochina Time).
Using YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss format :
var date = new Date('2011-06-29T16:52:48+00:00');
date.toString() // "Wed Jun 29 2011 09:52:48 GMT-0700 (PDT)"
For converting from the YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss format, make sure your date follow the ISO 8601 format.
Year:
YYYY (eg 1997)
Year and month:
YYYY-MM (eg 1997-07)
Complete date:
YYYY-MM-DD (eg 1997-07-16)
Complete date plus hours and minutes:
YYYY-MM-DDThh:mmTZD (eg 1997-07-16T19:20+01:00)
Complete date plus hours, minutes and seconds:
YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ssTZD (eg 1997-07-16T19:20:30+01:00)
Complete date plus hours, minutes, seconds and a decimal fraction of a second
YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss.sTZD (eg 1997-07-16T19:20:30.45+01:00) where:
YYYY = four-digit year
MM = two-digit month (01=January, etc.)
DD = two-digit day of month (01 through 31)
hh = two digits of hour (00 through 23) (am/pm NOT allowed)
mm = two digits of minute (00 through 59)
ss = two digits of second (00 through 59)
s = one or more digits representing a decimal fraction of a second
TZD = time zone designator (Z or +hh:mm or -hh:mm)
Important things to note
You must separate the date and the time by a T, a space will not work in some browsers
You must set the timezone using this format +hh:mm, using a string for a timezone (ex. : 'UTC') will not work in many browsers. +hh:mm represent the offset from the UTC timezone.
A JSON date string (serialized in C#) looks like "2015-10-13T18:58:17".
In angular, (following Hulvej) make a localdate filter:
myFilters.filter('localdate', function () {
return function(input) {
var date = new Date(input + '.000Z');
return date;
};
})
Then, display local time like:
{{order.createDate | localdate | date : 'MMM d, y h:mm a' }}
For me, this works well
if (typeof date === "number") {
time = new Date(date).toLocaleString();
} else if (typeof date === "string"){
time = new Date(`${date} UTC`).toLocaleString();
}
I Answering This If Any one want function that display converted time to specific id element and apply date format string yyyy-mm-dd
here date1 is string and ids is id of element that time going to display.
function convertUTCDateToLocalDate(date1, ids)
{
var newDate = new Date();
var ary = date1.split(" ");
var ary2 = ary[0].split("-");
var ary1 = ary[1].split(":");
var month_short = Array('Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun', 'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec');
newDate.setUTCHours(parseInt(ary1[0]));
newDate.setUTCMinutes(ary1[1]);
newDate.setUTCSeconds(ary1[2]);
newDate.setUTCFullYear(ary2[0]);
newDate.setUTCMonth(ary2[1]);
newDate.setUTCDate(ary2[2]);
ids = document.getElementById(ids);
ids.innerHTML = " " + newDate.getDate() + "-" + month_short[newDate.getMonth() - 1] + "-" + newDate.getFullYear() + " " + newDate.getHours() + ":" + newDate.getMinutes() + ":" + newDate.getSeconds();
}
i know that answer has been already accepted but i get here cause of google and i did solve with getting inspiration from accepted answer so i did want to just share it if someone need.
#Adorojan's answer is almost correct. But addition of offset is not correct since offset value will be negative if browser date is ahead of GMT and vice versa.
Below is the solution which I came with and is working perfectly fine for me:
// Input time in UTC
var inputInUtc = "6/29/2011 4:52:48";
var dateInUtc = new Date(Date.parse(inputInUtc+" UTC"));
//Print date in UTC time
document.write("Date in UTC : " + dateInUtc.toISOString()+"<br>");
var dateInLocalTz = convertUtcToLocalTz(dateInUtc);
//Print date in local time
document.write("Date in Local : " + dateInLocalTz.toISOString());
function convertUtcToLocalTz(dateInUtc) {
//Convert to local timezone
return new Date(dateInUtc.getTime() - dateInUtc.getTimezoneOffset()*60*1000);
}
Based on #digitalbath answer, here is a small function to grab the UTC timestamp and display the local time in a given DOM element (using jQuery for this last part):
https://jsfiddle.net/moriz/6ktb4sv8/1/
<div id="eventTimestamp" class="timeStamp">
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
// Convert UTC timestamp to local time and display in specified DOM element
function convertAndDisplayUTCtime(date,hour,minutes,elementID) {
var eventDate = new Date(''+date+' '+hour+':'+minutes+':00 UTC');
eventDate.toString();
$('#'+elementID).html(eventDate);
}
convertAndDisplayUTCtime('06/03/2015',16,32,'eventTimestamp');
</script>
You can use momentjs ,moment(date).format() will always give result in local date.
Bonus , you can format in any way you want. For eg.
moment().format('MMMM Do YYYY, h:mm:ss a'); // September 14th 2018, 12:51:03 pm
moment().format('dddd'); // Friday
moment().format("MMM Do YY");
For more details you can refer Moment js website
this worked well for me with safari/chrome/firefox :
const localDate = new Date(`${utcDate.replace(/-/g, '/')} UTC`);
I believe this is the best solution:
let date = new Date(objDate);
date.setMinutes(date.getTimezoneOffset());
This will update your date by the offset appropriately since it is presented in minutes.
tl;dr (new Date('6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM UTC')).toString()
The source string must specify a time zone or UTC.
One-liner:
(new Date('6/29/2011 4:52:48 PM UTC')).toString()
Result in one of my web browsers:
"Wed Jun 29 2011 09:52:48 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)"
This approach even selects standard/daylight time appropriately.
(new Date('1/29/2011 4:52:48 PM UTC')).toString()
Result in my browser:
"Sat Jan 29 2011 08:52:48 GMT-0800 (Pacific Standard Time)"
using dayjs library:
(new Date()).toISOString(); // returns 2021-03-26T09:58:57.156Z (GMT time)
dayjs().format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss,SSS'); // returns 2021-03-26 10:58:57,156 (local time)
(in nodejs, you must do before using it: const dayjs = require('dayjs');
in other environtments, read dayjs documentation.)
This works on my side
Option 1: If date format is something like "yyyy-mm-dd" or "yyyy-mm-dd H:n:s", ex: "2021-12-16 06:07:40"
With this format It doesnt really know if its a local format or a UTC time. So since we know that the date is a UTC we have to make sure that JS will know that its a UTC. So we have to set the date as UTC.
function setDateAsUTC(d) {
let date = new Date(d);
return new Date(
Date.UTC(
date.getFullYear(),
date.getMonth(),
date.getDate(),
date.getHours(),
date.getMinutes(),
date.getSeconds()
)
);
}
and then use it
let d = "2021-12-16 06:07:40";
setDateAsUTC(d).toLocaleString();
// output: 12/16/2021, 6:07:40 AM
Options 2: If UTC date format is ISO-8601. Mostly servers timestampz format are in ISO-8601 ex: '2011-06-29T16:52:48.000Z'. With this we can just pass it to the date function and toLocaleString() function.
let newDate = "2011-06-29T16:52:48.000Z"
new Date(newDate).toLocaleString();
//output: 6/29/2011, 4:52:48 PM
In JavaScript I used:
var updaated_time= "2022-10-25T06:47:42.000Z"
{{updaated_time | date: 'dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm'}} //output: 26-10-2022 12:00
I wrote a nice little script that takes a UTC epoch and converts it the client system timezone and returns it in d/m/Y H:i:s (like the PHP date function) format:
getTimezoneDate = function ( e ) {
function p(s) { return (s < 10) ? '0' + s : s; }
var t = new Date(0);
t.setUTCSeconds(e);
var d = p(t.getDate()),
m = p(t.getMonth()+1),
Y = p(t.getFullYear()),
H = p(t.getHours()),
i = p(t.getMinutes()),
s = p(t.getSeconds());
d = [d, m, Y].join('/') + ' ' + [H, i, s].join(':');
return d;
};

Material2 Datepicker - Convert date to timestamp without time [duplicate]

Can I convert iso date to milliseconds?
for example I want to convert this iso
2012-02-10T13:19:11+0000
to milliseconds.
Because I want to compare current date from the created date. And created date is an iso date.
Try this
var date = new Date("11/21/1987 16:00:00"); // some mock date
var milliseconds = date.getTime();
// This will return you the number of milliseconds
// elapsed from January 1, 1970
// if your date is less than that date, the value will be negative
console.log(milliseconds);
EDIT
You've provided an ISO date. It is also accepted by the constructor of the Date object
var myDate = new Date("2012-02-10T13:19:11+0000");
var result = myDate.getTime();
console.log(result);
Edit
The best I've found is to get rid of the offset manually.
var myDate = new Date("2012-02-10T13:19:11+0000");
var offset = myDate.getTimezoneOffset() * 60 * 1000;
var withOffset = myDate.getTime();
var withoutOffset = withOffset - offset;
console.log(withOffset);
console.log(withoutOffset);
Seems working. As far as problems with converting ISO string into the Date object you may refer to the links provided.
EDIT
Fixed the bug with incorrect conversion to milliseconds according to Prasad19sara's comment.
A shorthand of the previous solutions is
var myDate = +new Date("2012-02-10T13:19:11+0000");
It does an on the fly type conversion and directly outputs date in millisecond format.
Another way is also using parse method of Date util which only outputs EPOCH time in milliseconds.
var myDate = Date.parse("2012-02-10T13:19:11+0000");
Another option as of 2017 is to use Date.parse(). MDN's documentation points out, however, that it is unreliable prior to ES5.
var date = new Date(); // today's date and time in ISO format
var myDate = Date.parse(date);
See the fiddle for more details.
Yes, you can do this in a single line
let ms = Date.parse('2019-05-15 07:11:10.673Z');
console.log(ms);//1557904270673
Another possible solution is to compare current date with January 1, 1970, you can get January 1, 1970 by new Date(0);
var date = new Date();
var myDate= date - new Date(0);
Another solution could be to use Number object parser like this:
let result = Number(new Date("2012-02-10T13:19:11+0000"));
let resultWithGetTime = (new Date("2012-02-10T13:19:11+0000")).getTime();
console.log(result);
console.log(resultWithGetTime);
This converts to milliseconds just like getTime() on Date object
var date = new Date()
console.log(" Date in MS last three digit = "+ date.getMilliseconds())
console.log(" MS = "+ Date.now())
Using this we can get date in milliseconds
var date = new Date(date_string);
var milliseconds = date.getTime();
This worked for me!
if wants to convert UTC date to milliseconds
syntax : Date.UTC(year, month, ?day, ?hours, ?min, ?sec, ?milisec);
e.g :
date_in_mili = Date.UTC(2020, 07, 03, 03, 40, 40, 40);
console.log('miliseconds', date_in_mili);
In case if anyone wants to grab only the Time from a ISO Date, following will be helpful. I was searching for that and I couldn't find a question for it. So in case some one sees will be helpful.
let isoDate = '2020-09-28T15:27:15+05:30';
let result = isoDate.match(/\d\d:\d\d/);
console.log(result[0]);
The output will be the only the time from isoDate which is,
15:27

Create a Date object with CET timezone

To create Date object in UTC, we would write
new Date(Date.UTC(2012,02,30));
Without Date.UTC, it takes the locale and creates the Date object. If I have to create a Date object for CET running the program in some part of the world, how would I do it?
You don't create a JavaScript Date object "in" any specific timezone. JavaScript Date objects always work from a milliseconds-since-the-Epoch UTC value. They have methods that apply the local timezone offset and rules (getHours as opposed to getUTCHours), but only the local timezone. You can't set the timezone the Date object uses for its "local" methods.
What you're doing with Date.UTC (correctly, other than the leading 0 on 02) is just initializing the object with the appropriate milliseconds-since-the-Epoch value for that date/time (March 30th at midnight) in UTC, whereas new Date(2012, 2, 30) would have interpreted it as March 30th at midnight local time. There is no difference in the Date object other than the datetime it was initialized with.
If you need a timezone other than local, all you can do is use the UTC version of Date's functions and apply your own offset and rules for the timezone you want to use, which is non-trivial. (The offset is trivial; the rules tend not to be.)
If you go looking, you can find Node modules that handle timezones for you. A quick search for "node timezone" just now gave me timezone as the first hit. It also gave me links to this SO question, this SO question, and this list of timezone modules for Node.
function getCETorCESTDate() {
var localDate = new Date();
var utcOffset = localDate.getTimezoneOffset();
var cetOffset = utcOffset + 60;
var cestOffset = utcOffset + 120;
var cetOffsetInMilliseconds = cetOffset * 60 * 1000;
var cestOffsetInMilliseconds = cestOffset * 60 * 1000;
var cestDateStart = new Date();
var cestDateFinish = new Date();
var localDateTime = localDate.getTime();
var cestDateStartTime;
var cestDateFinishTime;
var result;
cestDateStart.setTime(Date.parse('29 March ' + localDate.getFullYear() + ' 02:00:00 GMT+0100'));
cestDateFinish.setTime(Date.parse('25 October ' + localDate.getFullYear() + ' 03:00:00 GMT+0200'));
cestDateStartTime = cestDateStart.getTime();
cestDateFinishTime = cestDateFinish.getTime();
if(localDateTime >= cestDateStartTime && localDateTime <= cestDateFinishTime) {
result = new Date(localDateTime + cestOffsetInMilliseconds);
} else {
result = new Date(localDateTime + cetOffsetInMilliseconds);
}
return result;
}

What is wrong with this javascript date difference calculate function?

Any idea why this function doesn't work properly in Internet Explorer?
function days_between(check_in, check_out)
{
var oneDay = 24*60*60*1000;
var firstDate = new Date(check_in);
var secondDate = new Date(check_out);
var diffDays = Math.abs((firstDate.getTime() - secondDate.getTime())/(oneDay));
return diffDays;
}
in internet explorer it shows NaN as result.
im calling this function in this date format
var check_in = "2012-02-09";
var check_out = "2012-02-12";
var range = days_between(check_in, check_out);
Regards
IE doesn't support Date.parse or passing "2012-02-09" (with ISO dates) to new Date, you need to parse it yourself and pass new Date( 2012, 1, 9 ) or use a Date.parse shim for ISO dates
The date format you're passing (yyyy-mm-dd) isn't supported by Date. See the note here that says it must be in a format parsable by parse. See here for acceptable parse formats: https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/parse
You have problem in creating the Date Object
Date objects are created with the Date() constructor.
There are four ways of instantiating a date:
new Date() // current date and time
new Date(milliseconds) //milliseconds since 1970/01/01
new Date(dateString)
new Date(year, month, day, hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds)
Most parameters above are optional. Not specifying, causes 0 to be passed in.
Once a Date object is created, a number of methods allow you to operate on it. Most methods allow you to get and set the year, month, day, hour, minute, second, and milliseconds of the object, using either local time or UTC (universal, or GMT) time.
All dates are calculated in milliseconds from 01 January, 1970 00:00:00 Universal Time (UTC) with a day containing 86,400,000 milliseconds.
Some examples of instantiating a date:
var today = new Date()
var d1 = new Date("October 13, 1975 11:13:00")
var d2 = new Date(79,5,24)
var d3 = new Date(79,5,24,11,33,0)
(Taken from http://www.w3schools.com/js/js_obj_date.asp)
You are giving the date arguments in an incorrect format. You can expect javascript to support these formats:
MM-dd-yyyy
yyyy/MM/dd
MM/dd/yyyy
MMMM dd, yyyy
MMM dd, yyyy
To fix your immediate problem, you can use replace() to format your arguments.
function days_between(check_in, check_out)
{
var firstDate = new Date(check_in.replace('-' , '/'));
var secondDate = new Date(check_out.replace('-' , '/'));
var diffDays = Math.abs((firstDate.getTime() - secondDate.getTime()) / 86400000);
return diffDays;
}
And by the way, you can replace oneDay with a constant.

How to the get the beginning of day of a date in javascript -- factoring in timezone

I am struggling to find out the beginning of day factoring in timezones in javascript. Consider the following:
var raw_time = new Date(this.created_at);
var offset_time = new Date(raw_hour.getTime() + time_zone_offset_in_ms);
// This resets timezone to server timezone
var offset_day = new Date(offset_time.setHours(0,0,0,0))
// always returns 2011-12-08 05:00:00 UTC, no matter what the offset was!
// This has the same issue:
var another_approach_offset_day = new Date(offset_time.getFullYear(),offset_time.getMonth(),offset_time.getHours())
I expect when i pass a Pacific Timezone offset, to get: 2011-12-08 08:00:00 UTC and so on.
What is the correct way to achieve this?
I think that part of the issue is that setHours method sets the hour (from 0 to 23), according to local time.
Also note that I am using javascript embedded in mongo, so I am unable to use any additional libraries.
Thanks!
Jeez, so this was really hard for me, but here is the final solution that I came up with the following solution. The trick was I need to use setHours or SetUTCHours to get the beginning of a day -- the only choices I have are system time and UTC. So I get the beginning of a UTC day, then add back the offset!
// Goal is given a time and a timezone, find the beginning of day
function(timestamp,selected_timezone_offset) {
var raw_time = new Date(timestamp)
var offset_time = new Date(raw_time.getTime() + selected_timezone_offset);
offset_time.setUTCHours(0,0,0,0);
var beginning_of_day = new Date(offset_time.getTime() - selected_timezone_offset);
return beginning_of_day;
}
In JavaScript all dates are stored as UTC. That is, the serial number returned by date.valueOf() is the number of milliseconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC. But, when you examine a date via .toString() or .getHours(), etc., you get the value in local time. That is, the local time of the system running the script. You can get the value in UTC with methods like .toUTCString() or .getUTCHours(), etc.
So, you can't get a date in an arbitrary timezone, it's all UTC (or local). But, of course, you can get a string representation of a date in whatever timezone you like if you know the UTC offset. The easiest way would be to subtract the UTC offset from the date and call .getUTCHours() or .toUTCString() or whatever you need:
var d = new Date();
d.setMinutes(d.getMinutes() - 480); // get pacific standard time
d.toUTCString(); // returns "Fri, 9 Dec 2011 12:56:53 UTC"
Of course, you'll need to ignore that "UTC" at the end if you use .toUTCString(). You could just go:
d.toUTCString().replace(/UTC$/, "PST");
Edit: Don't worry about when timezones overlap date boundaries. If you pass setHours() a negative number, it will subtract those hours from midnight yesterday. Eg:
var d = new Date(2011, 11, 10, 15); // d represents Dec 10, 2011 at 3pm local time
d.setHours(-1); // d represents Dec 9, 2011 at 11pm local time
d.setHours(-24); // d represents Dec 8, 2011 at 12am local time
d.setHours(52); // d represents Dec 10, 2011 at 4am local time
Where does the time_zone_offset_in_ms variable you use come from? Perhaps it is unreliable, and you should be using Date's getTimezoneOffset() method. There is an example at the following URL:
http://www.w3schools.com/jsref/jsref_getTimezoneOffset.asp
If you know the date from a different date string you can do the following:
var currentDate = new Date(this.$picker.data('date'));
var today = new Date();
today.setHours(0, -currentDate.getTimezoneOffset(), 0, 0);
(based on the codebase for a project I did)
var aDate = new Date();
var startOfTheDay = new Date(aDate.getTime() - aDate.getTime() % 86400000)
Will create the beginning of the day, of the day in question
You can make use of Intl.DateTimeFormat. This is also how luxon handles timezones.
The code below can convert any date with any timezone to its beginging/end of the time.
const beginingOfDay = (options = {}) => {
const { date = new Date(), timeZone } = options;
const parts = Intl.DateTimeFormat("en-US", {
timeZone,
hourCycle: "h23",
hour: "numeric",
minute: "numeric",
second: "numeric",
}).formatToParts(date);
const hour = parseInt(parts.find((i) => i.type === "hour").value);
const minute = parseInt(parts.find((i) => i.type === "minute").value);
const second = parseInt(parts.find((i) => i.type === "second").value);
return new Date(
1000 *
Math.floor(
(date - hour * 3600000 - minute * 60000 - second * 1000) / 1000
)
);
};
const endOfDay = (...args) =>
new Date(beginingOfDay(...args).getTime() + 86399999);
const beginingOfYear = () => {};
console.log(beginingOfDay({ timeZone: "GMT" }));
console.log(endOfDay({ timeZone: "GMT" }));
console.log(beginingOfDay({ timeZone: "Asia/Tokyo" }));
console.log(endOfDay({ timeZone: "Asia/Tokyo" }));

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