Format JavaScript date as yyyy-mm-dd
Asked Answered
C

54

1180

I have a date with the format Sun May 11,2014. How can I convert it to 2014-05-11 using JavaScript?

function taskDate(dateMilli) {
    var d = (new Date(dateMilli) + '').split(' ');
    d[2] = d[2] + ',';

    return [d[0], d[1], d[2], d[3]].join(' ');
}

var datemilli = Date.parse('Sun May 11,2014');
console.log(taskDate(datemilli));

The code above gives me the same date format, sun may 11,2014. How can I fix this?

Calvinna answered 11/5, 2014 at 13:13 Comment(6)
Really consider using a library like Moment.js. It will format in desired result :)Hurtless
Why using a library when 5 line of code can do the work ? @HurtlessDodgson
Possible duplicate of Where can I find documentation on formatting a date in JavaScript?Scintillation
Related: What are valid Date Time Strings in JavaScript? Note that "Sun May 11,2014" is not a valid date string and parsing it might fail in some browsers.Milepost
@Black Mamba why use library when few line do trickDemarcation
Similar format 2/21/22, 7:45 AM: date.toLocaleString([], { dateStyle: 'short', timeStyle: 'short' }) ref.: https://mcmap.net/q/37234/-how-do-i-use-tolocaletimestring-without-displaying-secondsBabysitter
P
980

You can do:

function formatDate(date) {
    var d = new Date(date),
        month = '' + (d.getMonth() + 1),
        day = '' + d.getDate(),
        year = d.getFullYear();

    if (month.length < 2) 
        month = '0' + month;
    if (day.length < 2) 
        day = '0' + day;

    return [year, month, day].join('-');
}
 
console.log(formatDate('Sun May 11,2014'));

Usage example:

console.log(formatDate('Sun May 11,2014'));

Output:

2014-05-11

Demo on JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/abdulrauf6182012/2Frm3/

Polychromatic answered 11/5, 2014 at 13:18 Comment(9)
Really multiple variable declarations in the same statement? #694602Phelips
@Fuser97381 Multiple variable declarations in the same statement is more than just an aesthetic style preference. It is a dangerous practice. If you inadvertently fail add a comma after each declaration you end up creating global variables. Not something that should be encouraged on what may become the canonical answer to a question.Phelips
'use strict'; @PhelipsJerald
Reformatting a date string should not depend on successful parsing of non-standard strings by the built-in parser. Given the OP format, it can be reformatted in less code without using a Date at all.Nominee
How to increment more 30 days in range 1~31?Suburb
What about doing the other way around: turn 2014-05-11 into May 5, 2014?Rad
@RazvanZamfir check toLocaleDateString, it may be a cleaner way to output the format you seek: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…Dniren
this works like a charm but I don't understand why javascript does not have a native solution for this... I mean, we are in 2020 and date is an important aspect to web apps.Garrik
What I find interesting ist that, that this solution has two times better performance, than the one with toISOStringAeneid
S
1545

Just leverage the built-in toISOString method that brings your date to the ISO 8601 format:

let yourDate = new Date()
yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]

Where yourDate is your date object.

Edit: @exbuddha wrote this to handle time zone in the comments:

const offset = yourDate.getTimezoneOffset()
yourDate = new Date(yourDate.getTime() - (offset*60*1000))
return yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]
Shelves answered 21/4, 2015 at 13:51 Comment(17)
BE CAREFUL with this method as it first converts to the date to UTC. If you are in a + timezone and your time portion is early in the day, then it could roll-back a day. Alternatively, if you're in a - timezone and your time portion is late in the day, then it could roll forward a day.Zincate
Try this instead: new Date(yourDateStr).toISOString().split('T')[0]Disturbance
const offset = yourDate.getTimezoneOffset(); yourDate = new Date(yourDate.getTime() + (offset*60*1000)); yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0] this should solve the issue of timezoneKitts
How come this has 123 votes? My timezone is +05:00 and var yourDate = new Date(2018, 3 - 1, 26); yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]; gives me "2018-03-25".Rist
now.toISOString().substring(0,10); This is a cleaner alternative, since it reminds you that YYYY-MM-DD are the first ten characters of the complete iso formatBerneicebernelle
@SalmanA As Luke mentions, the date is converted in UTC when shown in ISO string (an ISO string is in UTC). The +5 being converted makes the day fall before midnight, as by default Date will be constructed at hour 00h00.Goldarn
@SalmanA I... see. That was not my impression of that comment, following the wonder upon the votes. I hope you did not feel condescended upon.Goldarn
If you use toISOString, it is easier if you encode your date using UTC in the first place: utcDate1 = new Date(Date.UTC(2020, 0, 1)) -> Wed Jan 01 2020 01:00:00 GMT+0100 (Central European Standard Time) utcDate1.toISOString()-> "2020-01-01T00:00:00.000Z" .Any date/datetime you encode using .UTC will map exactly back as you expect when using .toISOString() .Porthole
Note: using the helpful solution commented by @mjwrazor, I had to subtract instead of add the offset to get the correct date (change the + (offset to a - (offset)Mordecai
@Mordecai you either add or subtract depending on your orientation from UTC 0. Which is England.Kitts
@Porthole The question is how to get the date in YYYY-MM-DD format. Your comment assumes that value is already available, so it doesn't apply here.Engelhardt
Dirty, but it works ;) - @TimHobbs The new Date() construct allows generating the Date objectNace
Probably been said already but converting to ISO string and splitting it returns the wrong day for certain dates. Had something to do with timezones and day light savings timeCommend
You can do this without the cludgy split by using modern APIs, see this answerFuzz
@Mordecai No, the timezoneoffset already has a sign, so you always subtractDeaton
Not sure if the spec has changed since this answer was written, but toISOString() puts it back into UTC time so it's not useful for other time zones: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…Ingratiate
I had something like this: dateObj["$gte"] = new Date(from).toISOString().split('T')[0];Frightful
P
980

You can do:

function formatDate(date) {
    var d = new Date(date),
        month = '' + (d.getMonth() + 1),
        day = '' + d.getDate(),
        year = d.getFullYear();

    if (month.length < 2) 
        month = '0' + month;
    if (day.length < 2) 
        day = '0' + day;

    return [year, month, day].join('-');
}
 
console.log(formatDate('Sun May 11,2014'));

Usage example:

console.log(formatDate('Sun May 11,2014'));

Output:

2014-05-11

Demo on JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/abdulrauf6182012/2Frm3/

Polychromatic answered 11/5, 2014 at 13:18 Comment(9)
Really multiple variable declarations in the same statement? #694602Phelips
@Fuser97381 Multiple variable declarations in the same statement is more than just an aesthetic style preference. It is a dangerous practice. If you inadvertently fail add a comma after each declaration you end up creating global variables. Not something that should be encouraged on what may become the canonical answer to a question.Phelips
'use strict'; @PhelipsJerald
Reformatting a date string should not depend on successful parsing of non-standard strings by the built-in parser. Given the OP format, it can be reformatted in less code without using a Date at all.Nominee
How to increment more 30 days in range 1~31?Suburb
What about doing the other way around: turn 2014-05-11 into May 5, 2014?Rad
@RazvanZamfir check toLocaleDateString, it may be a cleaner way to output the format you seek: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…Dniren
this works like a charm but I don't understand why javascript does not have a native solution for this... I mean, we are in 2020 and date is an important aspect to web apps.Garrik
What I find interesting ist that, that this solution has two times better performance, than the one with toISOStringAeneid
N
394

I use this way to get the date in format yyyy-mm-dd :)

var todayDate = new Date().toISOString().slice(0, 10);
console.log(todayDate);
Number answered 1/7, 2016 at 15:11 Comment(8)
How do you handle the date switching by a day as mentioned here by @Luke_Baulch?Pissed
You can do this: var todayDate = new Date(); todayDate.setMinutes(todayDate.getMinutes() - todayDate.getTimezoneOffset()); todayDate.toISOString().slice(0,10); This should help avoid the UTC problem.Number
@FernandoAguilar One doubt though, how do we know we need to subtract the offset or add it?Miaow
var todayDate = new Date(2018, 3 - 1, 26); todayDate.toISOString().slice(0, 10); gives me "2018-03-25". On another system var todayDate = new Date(2018, 3 - 1, 26, 17, 0, 0); todayDate.toISOString().slice(0, 10); gives me "2018-03-27".Rist
Doesn't always work. It sometimes subtracts a day due to UTC conversion.Pantoja
slicing strings is to bad practiceGreenfinch
UTC!!!! in australia we are +10 timezone. Because I tend to fix things in afternoon it has taken me a week to find this.Bankable
This will only work for the next ~8000 years. Should split on the T to be future proofAirdrop
H
392

2020 ANSWER

You can use the native .toLocaleDateString() function which supports several useful params like locale (to select a format like MM/DD/YYYY or YYYY/MM/DD), timezone (to convert the date) and formats details options (eg: 1 vs 01 vs January).

Examples

const testCases = [
  new Date().toLocaleDateString(), // 8/19/2020
  new Date().toLocaleString(undefined, {year: 'numeric', month: '2-digit', day: '2-digit', weekday:"long", hour: '2-digit', hour12: false, minute:'2-digit', second:'2-digit'}), // 'Wednesday, 14/06/2023, 13:43:57'
  new Date().toLocaleDateString('en-US', {year: 'numeric', month: '2-digit', day: '2-digit'}), // 08/19/2020 (month and day with two digits)
  new Date().toLocaleDateString('en-ZA'), // 2020/08/19 (year/month/day) notice the different locale
  new Date().toLocaleDateString('en-CA'), // 2020-08-19 (year-month-day) notice the different locale
  new Date().toLocaleString("en-US", {timeZone: "America/New_York"}), // 8/19/2020, 9:29:51 AM. (date and time in a specific timezone)
  new Date().toLocaleString("en-US", {hour: '2-digit', hour12: false, timeZone: "America/New_York"}),  // 09 (just the hour)
]

for (const testData of testCases) {
  console.log(testData)
}

Notice that sometimes to output a date in your specific desire format, you have to find a compatible locale with that format. You can find the locale examples here: https://www.w3schools.com/jsref/tryit.asp?filename=tryjsref_tolocalestring_date_all

Please notice that locale just change the format, if you want to transform a specific date to a specific country or city time equivalent then you need to use the timezone param.

Haugen answered 19/8, 2020 at 15:41 Comment(18)
This still suffers from problems with timezones as it is based off UTC, so you still have to jump all the hoops of determining the offset and altering the date.Engelhardt
@TimHobbs you can set the timezone you want eg: ("timeZone: "America/New_York") and the date will be converted to that timezone.Haugen
For my case where I didn't need the time zones, new Date().toLocaleDateString('en-CA') was perfectCodee
Can you format to yyyy/mm/dd in toLocaleDateString() ?Milligan
@JamesPoulose yes, you can do new Date().toLocaleDateString('en-ZA');Haugen
Exactly what I needed to get a particular format in local time. Thank you!Erechtheum
Note that "locale" is a misnomer for language. The value for the locale parameter is a BCP47 language tag. I have no idea why ECMA-402 calls it locale, but it's just wrong.Nominee
The exact format of .toLocaleDateString('en-CA') is not portable and will break in newer browsers! It recently changed from yyyy-MM-dd to M/d/yyyy in browsers with ICU 72 (Chrome 110 and Firefox 110 beta). Do not make assumptions about specific the specific formatting of locales. Use one of the answers based on .toISOString().Andaman
I switched from en-CA to sv-SE in 2023 due to to the issue @Anders mentioned.Rickie
@SamBarnum That…is the wrong lesson to learn here. There’s no guarantee sv-SE won’t change in the future too. If you’re parsing the result, use .toISOString().Andaman
They changed the 'en-CA' format, so be careful with that github.com/nodejs/node/issues/45945 Other formats in general should be good, it's not common at all the change.Haugen
I need the YYYY-MM-DD current date in the local time zone, not GMT time zone. I trust the sv-SE locale more than calculating the timezone offset.Rickie
Thank God they reverted it back. So can use en-CA again. unicode-org.atlassian.net/browse/CLDR-16399Palsgrave
This answer doesn't directly address the question. The gist here is essentially "try your luck with using a non-default locale"… and even then there is no explicit solution in the many (unrelated) examples givenGertie
Even the hacky usage of the CA locale in the example outputs yyyy/mm/dd and the question asks for yyyy-mm-dd like an ISO date string.Gertie
doesnt answer the questionSequoia
@Sequoia this does answer the question, just try: new Date().toLocaleDateString('en-CA'), // 2020-08-19 (year-month-day) notice the 'en-CA' localeHaugen
@JuanmaMenendez you're right I didn't see it hidden in all the other examples, however personally I dont like the en-CA convention but rather specify the outcome explicitly.Sequoia
F
233

The simplest way to convert your date to the yyyy-mm-dd format, is to do this:

var date = new Date("Sun May 11,2014");
var dateString = new Date(date.getTime() - (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000 ))
                    .toISOString()
                    .split("T")[0];

How it works:

  • new Date("Sun May 11,2014") converts the string "Sun May 11,2014" to a date object that represents the time Sun May 11 2014 00:00:00 in a timezone based on current locale (host system settings)
  • new Date(date.getTime() - (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000 )) converts your date to a date object that corresponds with the time Sun May 11 2014 00:00:00 in UTC (standard time) by subtracting the time zone offset
  • .toISOString() converts the date object to an ISO 8601 string 2014-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
  • .split("T") splits the string to array ["2014-05-11", "00:00:00.000Z"]
  • [0] takes the first element of that array

Demo

var date = new Date("Sun May 11,2014");
var dateString = new Date(date.getTime() - (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000 ))
                    .toISOString()
                    .split("T")[0];

console.log(dateString);

Note :

The first part of the code (new Date(...)) may need to be tweaked a bit if your input format is different from that of the OP. As mikeypie pointed out in the comments, if the date string is already in the expected output format and the local timezone is west of UTC, then new Date('2022-05-18') results in 2022-05-17. And a user's locale (eg. MM/DD/YYYY vs DD-MM-YYYY) may also impact how a date is parsed by new Date(...). So do some proper testing if you want to use this code for different input formats.

Formication answered 2/5, 2018 at 8:34 Comment(11)
No one else is aghast that this is the simplest way??Foam
.toISOString() doesn't work correctly with daylight savings though.Helpmeet
@JoeDevmon : I don't see how that's relevant here. The - (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000 ) bit should eliminate any timezone differences, including the impact of daylight savings time.Formication
@JohnSlegers that's what I was thinking, but then I was still getting the day before in some cases. I refactored and your example works now. I must have had a weird date string or something. Thanks for sticking with it and pointing that out. +1 👍Helpmeet
I've searched high and low across SO and other sites to find the best way to deal with timezone issues with dates in JS, and hands down, this is by far the easiest and the best. Thank you!Onceover
It sad but it is simpliest way to format js date to string you need. I'm new in js, but in java it is 100 times easier to format date to any format. That is why was thinking there are easier way, but after I tried different solutions I choose this one. Thank you for your answer.Warmblooded
The documentation for .getTimezoneOffset() says that it gives a positive value when the current locale is late from UTC, and a negative one when it's early. So shouldn't it be new Date(date.getTime() + (date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000 )) instead to get the correct UTC DateTime?Rickierickman
@Rickierickman : date.getTime() provides a date in a timezone based on your current locale. date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000 gives you the offset, in seconds of that same time zone, compared with the UTC time zone. By substracting the latter from the former, you effectively remove the offset from your date and thus get the correct date for the UTC time zone.Formication
@JohnSlegers I missed that date.getTime() was also localized, so it makes sense now. Thank you!Rickierickman
This fails in Chrome if the date string is already in the expected output format and the local timezone is west of UTC: var date = new Date('2022-05-18') results in '2022-05-17'. That means that if the user's locale format is not '5/18/2022' this might also break. This is because of the implementation of Date.parse: new Date('2022-05-18') is not equal to new Date('5/18/2022')Corposant
@Corposant : I updated my answer and added your info as a note.Formication
C
91

A combination of some of the answers:

var d = new Date(date);
date = [
  d.getFullYear(),
  ('0' + (d.getMonth() + 1)).slice(-2),
  ('0' + d.getDate()).slice(-2)
].join('-');
Conformity answered 15/12, 2015 at 13:10 Comment(4)
I like the solution the best - easy to read, and does not rely on toISOString() and the potential timezone pitfalls with using that function.Cousteau
this is the first one that doesn't make my brain hurt.Costar
This fails in Chrome if the date string is already in the expected output format and the local timezone is west of UTC: d = new Date('2022-05-18') results in '2022-05-17'. That means that if the user's locale format is not '5/18/2022' this might also break.Corposant
@Corposant Not true. You just simply got the date parsing wrong, since new Date('2022-05-18') will be parsed as UTC date 2022-05-18T00:00:00.000Z, and this simply corresponds to a local time on 2022-05-17 if you're west of UTC.Clericalism
B
63
format = function date2str(x, y) {
    var z = {
        M: x.getMonth() + 1,
        d: x.getDate(),
        h: x.getHours(),
        m: x.getMinutes(),
        s: x.getSeconds()
    };
    y = y.replace(/(M+|d+|h+|m+|s+)/g, function(v) {
        return ((v.length > 1 ? "0" : "") + z[v.slice(-1)]).slice(-2)
    });

    return y.replace(/(y+)/g, function(v) {
        return x.getFullYear().toString().slice(-v.length)
    });
}

Result:

format(new Date('Sun May 11,2014'), 'yyyy-MM-dd')
"2014-05-11
Bilge answered 11/5, 2014 at 13:37 Comment(5)
I like the additional flexibility that this solution gives over the other answers to this question. I haven't thoroughly tested this, but for the format I desired (i.e. "yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss"), it works just as expected.Hodgepodge
You could eaaaaaaaasily avoid eval.Rist
here's a version which avoids the eval and comments better jsfiddle.net/8904cmLd/2Cymbre
I benefited from this response. I did replace that line with the eval statement to return ((v.length > 1 ? "0" : "") + z[v.slice(-1)]).slice(-2);Procuration
"H" should be capitalized, not "h" (small)Godparent
B
60

If you don't have anything against using libraries, you could just use the Moments.js library like so:

var now = new Date();
var dateString = moment(now).format('YYYY-MM-DD');

var dateStringWithTime = moment(now).format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss');
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/moment.js/2.18.1/moment.min.js"></script>
Boisleduc answered 11/9, 2018 at 16:14 Comment(4)
Cool solution, but its a 300kb packageSteelman
Applied in react project: npm install moment --save import moment from 'moment'; const showEventDate = moment(your-date-here).format('YYYY-MM-DD; HH:mm A'); A pure solution for presenting date/time in any format. It gives local date-time with AM/PM and whatever you need just changing the format. Moment.js also provides easy date/time counting solution.Windmill
@theTradeCoder as Adam mentioned above the size of moment is pretty large (I think it is more like 67kb, but still) so you should consider that when evaluating the ease of use and utility of any dependency. There are smaller alternatives (day.js = 2kb).Engelhardt
Just an update about the moment.js library that - moment.js is already discontinued.Privateer
E
55

You can use toLocaleDateString('fr-CA') on Date object

console.log(new Date('Sun May 11,2014').toLocaleDateString('fr-CA'));

Also I found out that those locales give right result from this locales list List of All Locales and Their Short Codes?

'en-CA'
'fr-CA'
'lt-LT'
'sv-FI'
'sv-SE'

var localesList = ["af-ZA",
  "am-ET",
  "ar-AE",
  "ar-BH",
  "ar-DZ",
  "ar-EG",
  "ar-IQ",
  "ar-JO",
  "ar-KW",
  "ar-LB",
  "ar-LY",
  "ar-MA",
  "arn-CL",
  "ar-OM",
  "ar-QA",
  "ar-SA",
  "ar-SY",
  "ar-TN",
  "ar-YE",
  "as-IN",
  "az-Cyrl-AZ",
  "az-Latn-AZ",
  "ba-RU",
  "be-BY",
  "bg-BG",
  "bn-BD",
  "bn-IN",
  "bo-CN",
  "br-FR",
  "bs-Cyrl-BA",
  "bs-Latn-BA",
  "ca-ES",
  "co-FR",
  "cs-CZ",
  "cy-GB",
  "da-DK",
  "de-AT",
  "de-CH",
  "de-DE",
  "de-LI",
  "de-LU",
  "dsb-DE",
  "dv-MV",
  "el-GR",
  "en-029",
  "en-AU",
  "en-BZ",
  "en-CA",
  "en-GB",
  "en-IE",
  "en-IN",
  "en-JM",
  "en-MY",
  "en-NZ",
  "en-PH",
  "en-SG",
  "en-TT",
  "en-US",
  "en-ZA",
  "en-ZW",
  "es-AR",
  "es-BO",
  "es-CL",
  "es-CO",
  "es-CR",
  "es-DO",
  "es-EC",
  "es-ES",
  "es-GT",
  "es-HN",
  "es-MX",
  "es-NI",
  "es-PA",
  "es-PE",
  "es-PR",
  "es-PY",
  "es-SV",
  "es-US",
  "es-UY",
  "es-VE",
  "et-EE",
  "eu-ES",
  "fa-IR",
  "fi-FI",
  "fil-PH",
  "fo-FO",
  "fr-BE",
  "fr-CA",
  "fr-CH",
  "fr-FR",
  "fr-LU",
  "fr-MC",
  "fy-NL",
  "ga-IE",
  "gd-GB",
  "gl-ES",
  "gsw-FR",
  "gu-IN",
  "ha-Latn-NG",
  "he-IL",
  "hi-IN",
  "hr-BA",
  "hr-HR",
  "hsb-DE",
  "hu-HU",
  "hy-AM",
  "id-ID",
  "ig-NG",
  "ii-CN",
  "is-IS",
  "it-CH",
  "it-IT",
  "iu-Cans-CA",
  "iu-Latn-CA",
  "ja-JP",
  "ka-GE",
  "kk-KZ",
  "kl-GL",
  "km-KH",
  "kn-IN",
  "kok-IN",
  "ko-KR",
  "ky-KG",
  "lb-LU",
  "lo-LA",
  "lt-LT",
  "lv-LV",
  "mi-NZ",
  "mk-MK",
  "ml-IN",
  "mn-MN",
  "mn-Mong-CN",
  "moh-CA",
  "mr-IN",
  "ms-BN",
  "ms-MY",
  "mt-MT",
  "nb-NO",
  "ne-NP",
  "nl-BE",
  "nl-NL",
  "nn-NO",
  "nso-ZA",
  "oc-FR",
  "or-IN",
  "pa-IN",
  "pl-PL",
  "prs-AF",
  "ps-AF",
  "pt-BR",
  "pt-PT",
  "qut-GT",
  "quz-BO",
  "quz-EC",
  "quz-PE",
  "rm-CH",
  "ro-RO",
  "ru-RU",
  "rw-RW",
  "sah-RU",
  "sa-IN",
  "se-FI",
  "se-NO",
  "se-SE",
  "si-LK",
  "sk-SK",
  "sl-SI",
  "sma-NO",
  "sma-SE",
  "smj-NO",
  "smj-SE",
  "smn-FI",
  "sms-FI",
  "sq-AL",
  "sr-Cyrl-BA",
  "sr-Cyrl-CS",
  "sr-Cyrl-ME",
  "sr-Cyrl-RS",
  "sr-Latn-BA",
  "sr-Latn-CS",
  "sr-Latn-ME",
  "sr-Latn-RS",
  "sv-FI",
  "sv-SE",
  "sw-KE",
  "syr-SY",
  "ta-IN",
  "te-IN",
  "tg-Cyrl-TJ",
  "th-TH",
  "tk-TM",
  "tn-ZA",
  "tr-TR",
  "tt-RU",
  "tzm-Latn-DZ",
  "ug-CN",
  "uk-UA",
  "ur-PK",
  "uz-Cyrl-UZ",
  "uz-Latn-UZ",
  "vi-VN",
  "wo-SN",
  "xh-ZA",
  "yo-NG",
  "zh-CN",
  "zh-HK",
  "zh-MO",
  "zh-SG",
  "zh-TW",
  "zu-ZA"
];

localesList.forEach(lcl => {
  if ("2014-05-11" === new Date('Sun May 11,2014').toLocaleDateString(lcl)) {
    console.log(lcl, new Date('Sun May 11,2014').toLocaleDateString(lcl));
  }
});
Escarp answered 31/1, 2020 at 23:39 Comment(6)
Any idea why this works? Is ISO format just the default, or do these locales genuinely use that format? If it's the former I'd be concerned that it could change unexpectedly in the future.Mahound
THis is not working with NodeJS outside of browser.Rosabelle
@Mahound I think these locales genuinely use those formats. I've came to the same answer by looking at this Wikipedia page: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Date_format_by_countryKornegay
After 3 days, and trawling through too many SO javascript date questions, and trying to ask a new question (30 mins before closed as duplicate) here at last is an answer that is actually correct. I could weep.Anniceannie
Thanks for these code, this is really a better shortcut to obtain format in js render.Speckle
en-CA no longer works in new ChromeVesuvian
I
27

The 2021 solution using Intl.

The new Intl Object is now supported on all browsers.
You can choose the format by choosing a "locale" that uses the required format.

The Swedish locale uses the format "yyyy-mm-dd":

// Create a date
const date = new Date(2021, 10, 28);

// Create a formatter using the "sv-SE" locale
const dateFormatter = Intl.DateTimeFormat('sv-SE');

// Use the formatter to format the date
console.log(dateFormatter.format(date)); // "2021-11-28"

Downsides of using Intl:

  • You cannot "unformat" or "parse" strings using this method
  • You have to search for the required format (for instance on Wikipedia) and cannot use a format-string like "yyyy-mm-dd"
Ineludible answered 27/10, 2021 at 10:56 Comment(2)
but where is the time?Amaras
The question was only about formatting dates. This answer only returns a formatted date, no time. If you want the time formatted, see if one of the other answers can help you.Ineludible
S
23

Shortest

.toJSON().slice(0,10);

var d = new Date('Sun May 11,2014' +' UTC');   // Parse as UTC
let str = d.toJSON().slice(0,10);              // Show as UTC

console.log(str);
Succedaneum answered 25/8, 2020 at 21:49 Comment(3)
This doesn't work when the client is ahead of the UTC and the date in the UTC time is one day behind the current client date.Quotidian
We don't need a screenshot for this if you are not in the 00+00 timezone: > d=new Date() ; d.setHours(0,30,0,0) ; d --> Sat Oct 09 2021 00:30:00 GMT+0100 (BST) ; d.toJSON() --> "2021-10-08T23:30:00.000Z"Anniceannie
In snippet I show how to operate on UTC dates (which is timezone independent)Enolaenormity
I
21

Simply use this:

var date = new Date('1970-01-01'); // Or your date here
console.log((date.getMonth() + 1) + '/' + date.getDate() + '/' +  date.getFullYear());

Simple and sweet ;)

Ichinomiya answered 13/1, 2017 at 10:4 Comment(4)
padding is not there for 2 letter format. it'll show single digit if date or month is less than 10 that's why can't use this directly.Reginareginald
yess but that can be achived simply using javascript, its totaly upto your requirement i think so , isn't it ? @YatenderSinghIchinomiya
yeah correct but check the title of question "yyyy-mm-dd" format he wants :)Reginareginald
var old_date = new Date(date); var new_date = old_date.getFullYear() + '-' + (old_date.getMonth() + 1) + '-' + old_date.getDate()Sherrisherrie
E
21

In the most of cases (no time zone handling) this is enough:

date.toISOString().substring(0,10)

Example

var date = new Date();
console.log(date.toISOString()); // 2022-07-04T07:14:08.925Z
console.log(date.toISOString().substring(0,10)); // 2022-07-04
Eureka answered 26/10, 2021 at 16:26 Comment(3)
note "date" should be a var date = new Date() before this line. Or, just new Date() .toISOString().substring(0,10);Blakeblakelee
substring(0, 10) will only work for the next ~8000 yearsAirdrop
data.offer_start =1972-07-10 00:00:00 data.offer_start.substring(0,10)Lough
A
19

toISOString() assumes your date is local time and converts it to UTC. You will get an incorrect date string.

The following method should return what you need.

Date.prototype.yyyymmdd = function() {         

    var yyyy = this.getFullYear().toString();                                    
    var mm = (this.getMonth()+1).toString(); // getMonth() is zero-based         
    var dd  = this.getDate().toString();             

    return yyyy + '-' + (mm[1]?mm:"0"+mm[0]) + '-' + (dd[1]?dd:"0"+dd[0]);
};

Source: https://blog.justin.kelly.org.au/simple-javascript-function-to-format-the-date-as-yyyy-mm-dd/

Arielariela answered 9/8, 2017 at 13:46 Comment(0)
S
15

Retrieve year, month, and day, and then put them together. Straight, simple, and accurate.

function formatDate(date) {
    var year = date.getFullYear().toString();
    var month = (date.getMonth() + 101).toString().substring(1);
    var day = (date.getDate() + 100).toString().substring(1);
    return year + "-" + month + "-" + day;
}

//Usage example:
alert(formatDate(new Date()));
Skijoring answered 8/11, 2017 at 16:21 Comment(1)
That's the correct oneAffirmatory
P
15
new Date().toLocaleDateString('pt-br').split( '/' ).reverse( ).join( '-' );

or

new Date().toISOString().split('T')[0]
new Date('23/03/2020'.split('/').reverse().join('-')).toISOString()
new Date('23/03/2020'.split('/').reverse().join('-')).toISOString().split('T')[0]

Try this!

Phlyctena answered 24/4, 2020 at 0:49 Comment(4)
The second option might display the wrong date because it will display the data in UTC timezone.Charming
NOTE: "en-CA" locale string no longer generates yyyy-mm-ddXyster
toISOString uses timezoneHardfeatured
@Hardfeatured It uses UTC timezone, no?Airdrop
P
9
const formatDate = d => [
    d.getFullYear(),
    (d.getMonth() + 1).toString().padStart(2, '0'),
    d.getDate().toString().padStart(2, '0')
].join('-');

You can make use of padstart.

padStart(n, '0') ensures that a minimum of n characters are in a string and prepends it with '0's until that length is reached.

join('-') concatenates an array, adding '-' symbol between every elements.

getMonth() starts at 0 hence the +1.

Piapiacenza answered 27/8, 2020 at 14:19 Comment(0)
T
8

When ES2018 rolls around (works in chrome) you can simply regex it

(new Date())
    .toISOString()
    .replace(
        /^(?<year>\d+)-(?<month>\d+)-(?<day>\d+)T.*$/,
        '$<year>-$<month>-$<day>'
    )

2020-07-14

Or if you'd like something pretty versatile with no libraries whatsoever

(new Date())
    .toISOString()
    .match(
        /^(?<yyyy>\d\d(?<yy>\d\d))-(?<mm>0?(?<m>\d+))-(?<dd>0?(?<d>\d+))T(?<HH>0?(?<H>\d+)):(?<MM>0?(?<M>\d+)):(?<SSS>(?<SS>0?(?<S>\d+))\.\d+)(?<timezone>[A-Z][\dA-Z.-:]*)$/
    )
    .groups

Which results in extracting the following

{
    H: "8"
    HH: "08"
    M: "45"
    MM: "45"
    S: "42"
    SS: "42"
    SSS: "42.855"
    d: "14"
    dd: "14"
    m: "7"
    mm: "07"
    timezone: "Z"
    yy: "20"
    yyyy: "2020"
}

Which you can use like so with replace(..., '$<d>/$<m>/\'$<yy> @ $<H>:$<MM>') as at the top instead of .match(...).groups to get

14/7/'20 @ 8:45
Tersina answered 14/7, 2020 at 8:49 Comment(7)
There are several simpler ways to butcher the toISOString string which were already posted before this one. For people who are willing to tolerate the potential inaccuracy of using toISOString, the sheer overhead and code bloat makes this a solution that no one should consider (the first snippet anyway).Kirschner
Look, man, unless you're trying to reparse dates literally hundreds of thousands of times in a matter of seconds you're not going to see any difference at all, so I don't know where you get off calling it bloat. Like with any other novel answer added to an old, already-answered question; this provides the reader with choice, and maybe, knowledge ("gee, I didnt know regex could do that!"). The reader should know whether or not an answer is appropriate for their usecase, and you insult them.Tersina
I never mentioned performance so you can leave the argument about 100,000 iterations. My point is that earlier answers provided simpler techniques.Kirschner
Yes, but not readable, or easily extensible. You called it bloat, which is literally code...that is perceived as unnecessarily long, slow, or otherwise wasteful of resources. SO is primarily for knowledge, so yes, even though the literal question has been answered, sometimes there are other angles that others (and at least already literally 3▲) find might useful! Imagine that. I don't play the "Fastest Gun In The West" game, so when you see me post a late answer, it is because I have something valuable to offer and I hope that you will acknowledge the care that I take. -some hypocriteTersina
Nothing hypocritical going on here. I am very clear about how the first snippet is far less attractive than simply calling .slice(0,10). slice() is much more concise, direct, readable. I love regex but not for this question. See how I am not attacking you as a person? I am judging your answer to this question.Kirschner
I feel like the more important point is that all answers using toISOString or toJSON are just wrong for between 1 & 12 hours every day, for most of the world?Anniceannie
I assume a lot of people are adjusting the Date by their utcOffset first. I could include that in the answerTersina
B
8

Unfortunately, JavaScript's Date object has many pitfalls. Any solution based on Date's builtin toISOString has to mess with the timezone, as discussed in some other answers to this question. The clean solution to represent an ISO-8601 date (without time) is given by Temporal.PlainDate from the Temporal proposal. As of February 2021, you have to choose the workaround that works best for you.

use Date with vanilla string concatenation

Assuming that your internal representation is based on Date, you can perform manual string concatenation. The following code avoids some of Date's pitfalls (timezone, zero-based month, missing 2-digit formatting), but there might be other issues.

function vanillaToDateOnlyIso8601() {
  // month May has zero-based index 4
  const date = new Date(2014, 4, 11);

  const yyyy = date.getFullYear();
  const mm = String(date.getMonth() + 1).padStart(2, "0"); // month is zero-based
  const dd = String(date.getDate()).padStart(2, "0");

  if (yyyy < 1583) {
    // TODO: decide how to support dates before 1583
    throw new Error(`dates before year 1583 are not supported`);
  }

  const formatted = `${yyyy}-${mm}-${dd}`;
  console.log("vanilla", formatted);
}

use Date with helper library (e.g. formatISO from date-fns)

This is a popular approach, but you are still forced to handle a calendar date as a Date, which represents

a single moment in time in a platform-independent format

The following code should get the job done, though:

import { formatISO } from "date-fns";

function dateFnsToDateOnlyIso8601() {
  // month May has zero-based index 4
  const date = new Date(2014, 4, 11);
  const formatted = formatISO(date, { representation: "date" });
  console.log("date-fns", formatted);
}

find a library that properly represents dates and times

I wish there was a clean and battle-tested library that brings its own well-designed date–time representations. A promising candidate for the task in this question was LocalDate from @js-joda/core, but the library is less active than, say, date-fns. When playing around with some example code, I also had some issues after adding the optional @js-joda/timezone.

However, the core functionality works and looks very clean to me:

import { LocalDate, Month } from "@js-joda/core";

function jodaDateOnlyIso8601() {
  const someDay = LocalDate.of(2014, Month.MAY, 11);
  const formatted = someDay.toString();
  console.log("joda", formatted);
}

experiment with the Temporal-proposal polyfill

This is not recommended for production, but you can import the future if you wish:

import { Temporal } from "proposal-temporal";

function temporalDateOnlyIso8601() {
  // yep, month is one-based here (as of Feb 2021)
  const plainDate = new Temporal.PlainDate(2014, 5, 11);
  const formatted = plainDate.toString();
  console.log("proposal-temporal", formatted);
}
Bega answered 28/2, 2021 at 14:6 Comment(1)
Note that the NPM package proposal-temporal is deprecated and should not be used. Developers looking for Temporal polyfills should check github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal#polyfills to see the recommended list of polyfills, which as of today are @js-temporal/polyfill and temporal-polyfillExtravert
L
8

Simply Retrieve year, month, and day, and then put them together.

    function dateFormat(date) {
        const day = date.getDate();
        const month = date.getMonth() + 1;
        const year = date.getFullYear();

        return `${year}-${month}-${day}`;
    }

    console.log(dateFormat(new Date()));
Laural answered 3/10, 2022 at 14:52 Comment(1)
For me the day is off by one.Serrell
A
7

You can try this: https://www.npmjs.com/package/timesolver

npm i timesolver

Use it in your code:

const timeSolver = require('timeSolver');
const date = new Date();
const dateString = timeSolver.getString(date, "YYYY-MM-DD");

You can get the date string by using this method:

getString
Anomalistic answered 2/7, 2016 at 6:45 Comment(0)
G
7

To consider the timezone also, this one-liner should be good without any library:

new Date().toLocaleString("en-IN", {timeZone: "Asia/Kolkata"}).split(',')[0]
Goral answered 4/10, 2018 at 17:27 Comment(1)
Problem with this is that every locale will return different result. For example en-GB will return 20/12/2012 and ko-KR will return2012. 12. 20.. But format should be yyyy-mm-ddEld
P
7

This is what I did.

Another alternate short and simple method:-

const date = new Date().toISOString();
console.log(date.substring(0, date.indexOf('T')));

Used substring() with indexOf("T") rather than splitting it into array at character 'T' and accessing element at 0th index.

Penalize answered 1/11, 2023 at 12:24 Comment(0)
H
5

Here is one way to do it:

var date = Date.parse('Sun May 11,2014');

function format(date) {
  date = new Date(date);

  var day = ('0' + date.getDate()).slice(-2);
  var month = ('0' + (date.getMonth() + 1)).slice(-2);
  var year = date.getFullYear();

  return year + '-' + month + '-' + day;
}

console.log(format(date));
Hurlburt answered 11/5, 2014 at 13:23 Comment(0)
G
5

I suggest using something like formatDate-js instead of trying to replicate it every time. Just use a library that supports all the major strftime actions.

new Date().format("%Y-%m-%d")
Grani answered 9/12, 2014 at 11:1 Comment(0)
O
5

Warning this code does not work in certain versions of Chrome, Node.js, etc.

  • Expected: yyyy-MM-dd
  • Actual: M/d/yyyy

References


Please consider timezones when converting Date to date string.

Two methods can be used.

  • .toISOString(); - Fixed to GMT+0. Includes time, which should be removed later.
  • .toLocaleDateString('en-CA'); - Timezone can be specified. Defaults to system.

Note that en-CA is a locale, not a timezone. Canada uses the YYYY-MM-DD format.

In the following example, the system timezone is set to PDT (GMT-7)

const date = new Date('2023-04-08 GMT+09:00');
// Sat Apr 08 2023 00:00:00 GMT+0900 (한국 표준시)
// Fri Apr 07 2023 08:00:00 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)

// Based on GMT+0 or UTC - time is substringed.
date.toISOString(); // '2023-04-07T15:00:00.000Z'
date.toISOString().substring(0, 10); // '2023-04-07'

// Based on GMT-7 - local timezone of the system
date.toLocaleDateString('en-CA'); // '2023-04-07'

// Based on GMT+9 - Asia/Seoul is GMT+9
date.toLocaleDateString('en-CA', { timeZone: 'Asia/Seoul' }); // '2023-04-08'
Orpah answered 8/4, 2023 at 2:12 Comment(0)
T
4

Date.js is great for this.

require("datejs")
(new Date()).toString("yyyy-MM-dd")
Theosophy answered 9/6, 2016 at 17:9 Comment(0)
V
4

You can use this function for better format and easy of use:

function convert(date) {
    const d = Date.parse(date)
    const   date_obj = new Date(d)
    return `${date_obj.getFullYear()}-${date_obj.toLocaleString("default", { month: "2-digit" })}-${date_obj.toLocaleString("default", { day: "2-digit"})}`
}

This function will format the month as 2-digit output as well as the days

Viscoid answered 29/11, 2022 at 18:16 Comment(0)
L
4

Use the new Temporal proposal (see browser support below) with a PlainDate object:

Temporal.PlainDate.from({ year: 2006, month: 8, day: 24 }).toString() // '2006-08-24'

Or, if you want the date for today:

Temporal.Now.plainDateISO().toString() // '2023-08-25'

Demo with <input type="date" /> (React): https://codesandbox.io/s/hungry-forest-nymhkl?file=/src/App.js

Browser Support

Temporal proposal on Can I use shows lacking support for now (no browsers supporting this as of Aug 2023). So unless this changes by the time you do this, you will need to install @js-temporal/polyfill and apply the polyfill like this:

import { Temporal, Intl, toTemporalInstant } from '@js-temporal/polyfill';
Date.prototype.toTemporalInstant = toTemporalInstant;
Lagting answered 25/8, 2023 at 7:58 Comment(0)
L
3

Yet another combination of the answers. Nicely readable, but a little lengthy.

function getCurrentDayTimestamp() {
  const d = new Date();

  return new Date(
    Date.UTC(
      d.getFullYear(),
      d.getMonth(),
      d.getDate(),
      d.getHours(),
      d.getMinutes(),
      d.getSeconds()
    )
  // `toIsoString` returns something like "2017-08-22T08:32:32.847Z"
  // and we want the first part ("2017-08-22")
  ).toISOString().slice(0, 10);
}
Laurinelaurita answered 22/8, 2017 at 15:43 Comment(1)
Using your answer I created a nicely readable one line function. It accepts a javascript Date object as a parameter: const formatDate = d => new Date(Date.UTC(d.getFullYear(), d.getMonth(), d.getDate())).toISOString().slice(0,10);Earring
R
3

None of these answers quite satisfied me. I wanted a cross-platform solution that gave me the day in the local timezone without using any external libraries.

This is what I came up with:

function localDay(time) {
  var minutesOffset = time.getTimezoneOffset()
  var millisecondsOffset = minutesOffset*60*1000
  var local = new Date(time - millisecondsOffset)
  return local.toISOString().substr(0, 10)
}

That should return the day of the date, in YYYY-MM-DD format, in the timezone the date references.

So for example, localDay(new Date("2017-08-24T03:29:22.099Z")) will return "2017-08-23" even though it's already the 24th at UTC.

You'll need to polyfill Date.prototype.toISOString for it to work in Internet Explorer 8, but it should be supported everywhere else.

Rodrigues answered 24/8, 2017 at 3:35 Comment(1)
Maybe worth noting that it will only give you 2017-08-23 if you're sufficiently behind UTC (e.g. in the US).Formality
C
3

A few of the previous answer were OK, but they weren't very flexible. I wanted something that could really handle more edge cases, so I took @orangleliu 's answer and expanded on it. https://jsfiddle.net/8904cmLd/1/

function DateToString(inDate, formatString) {
    // Written by m1m1k 2018-04-05

    // Validate that we're working with a date
    if(!isValidDate(inDate))
    {
        inDate = new Date(inDate);
    }

    // See the jsFiddle for extra code to be able to use DateToString('Sun May 11,2014', 'USA');
    //formatString = CountryCodeToDateFormat(formatString);

    var dateObject = {
        M: inDate.getMonth() + 1,
        d: inDate.getDate(),
        D: inDate.getDate(),
        h: inDate.getHours(),
        m: inDate.getMinutes(),
        s: inDate.getSeconds(),
        y: inDate.getFullYear(),
        Y: inDate.getFullYear()
    };

    // Build Regex Dynamically based on the list above.
    // It should end up with something like this: "/([Yy]+|M+|[Dd]+|h+|m+|s+)/g"
    var dateMatchRegex = joinObj(dateObject, "+|") + "+";
    var regEx = new RegExp(dateMatchRegex,"g");
    formatString = formatString.replace(regEx, function(formatToken) {
        var datePartValue = dateObject[formatToken.slice(-1)];
        var tokenLength = formatToken.length;

        // A conflict exists between specifying 'd' for no zero pad -> expand
        // to '10' and specifying yy for just two year digits '01' instead
        // of '2001'.  One expands, the other contracts.
        //
        // So Constrict Years but Expand All Else
        if (formatToken.indexOf('y') < 0 && formatToken.indexOf('Y') < 0)
        {
            // Expand single digit format token 'd' to
            // multi digit value '10' when needed
            var tokenLength = Math.max(formatToken.length, datePartValue.toString().length);
        }
        var zeroPad = (datePartValue.toString().length < formatToken.length ? "0".repeat(tokenLength) : "");
        return (zeroPad + datePartValue).slice(-tokenLength);
    });

    return formatString;
}

Example usage:

DateToString('Sun May 11,2014', 'MM/DD/yy');
DateToString('Sun May 11,2014', 'yyyy.MM.dd');
DateToString(new Date('Sun Dec 11,2014'),'yy-M-d');
Cymbre answered 5/4, 2018 at 11:51 Comment(1)
Nice clean & commented solution. Yet I'm skeptical about the first argument, which is silently replaced by a fresh new date if not recognized as a valid date. I'd rather put this "optionnal default value" as 2nd argument instead, and return some kind of exception (could be a simple "Invalid date format" returned string) in case the format isn't recognized, so that error appear clearly to the tester/userEthelynethene
V
3

If you use momentjs, now they include a constant for that format YYYY-MM-DD:

date.format(moment.HTML5_FMT.DATE)
Varsity answered 21/5, 2020 at 11:9 Comment(0)
B
3

I have a oneliner for this

dateInstance.toLocaleDateString().replaceAll("/", "-").split("-").reverse().join("-");
Bluey answered 27/9, 2022 at 0:17 Comment(1)
This will fail in any locale that does not use this date format.Devonadevondra
S
3

const YYYY_MM_DD_Formater = (date) => {
    const t = new Date(date)
    const y = t.getFullYear()
    const m = ('0' + (t.getMonth() + 1)).slice(-2)
    const d = ('0' + t.getDate()).slice(-2)
    return `${y}-${m}-${d}`
}

Update

const YYYY_MM_DD_Formater = (date,format='YYYY-MM-DD') => {
    const t = new Date(date)
    const y = t.getFullYear()
    const m = ('0' + (t.getMonth() + 1)).slice(-2)
    const d = ('0' + t.getDate()).slice(-2)
    return format.replace('YYYY',y).replace('MM',m).replace('DD',d)
}
Shoeblack answered 4/5, 2023 at 10:21 Comment(1)
Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.Sandlin
N
2

Reformatting a date string is fairly straightforward, e.g.

var s = 'Sun May 11,2014';

function reformatDate(s) {
  function z(n){return ('0' + n).slice(-2)}
  var months = [,'jan','feb','mar','apr','may','jun',
                 'jul','aug','sep','oct','nov','dec'];
  var b = s.split(/\W+/);
  return b[3] + '-' +
    z(months.indexOf(b[1].substr(0,3).toLowerCase())) + '-' +
    z(b[2]);
}

console.log(reformatDate(s));
Nominee answered 16/6, 2017 at 12:27 Comment(0)
L
2

PHP compatible date format

Here is a small function which can take the same parameters as the PHP function date() and return a date/time string in JavaScript.

Note that not all date() format options from PHP are supported. You can extend the parts object to create the missing format-token

/**
 * Date formatter with PHP "date()"-compatible format syntax.
 */
const formatDate = (format, date) => {
  if (!format) { format = 'Y-m-d' }
  if (!date) { date = new Date() }

  const parts = {
    Y: date.getFullYear().toString(),
    y: ('00' + (date.getYear() - 100)).toString().slice(-2),
    m: ('0' + (date.getMonth() + 1)).toString().slice(-2),
    n: (date.getMonth() + 1).toString(),
    d: ('0' + date.getDate()).toString().slice(-2),
    j: date.getDate().toString(),
    H: ('0' + date.getHours()).toString().slice(-2),
    G: date.getHours().toString(),
    i: ('0' + date.getMinutes()).toString().slice(-2),
    s: ('0' + date.getSeconds()).toString().slice(-2)
  }

  const modifiers = Object.keys(parts).join('')
  const reDate = new RegExp('(?<!\\\\)[' + modifiers + ']', 'g')
  const reEscape = new RegExp('\\\\([' + modifiers + '])', 'g')

  return format
    .replace(reDate, $0 => parts[$0])
    .replace(reEscape, ($0, $1) => $1)
}

// ----- EXAMPLES -----
console.log( formatDate() ); // "2019-05-21"
console.log( formatDate('H:i:s') ); // "16:21:32"
console.log( formatDate('Y-m-d, o\\n H:i:s') ); // "2019-05-21, on 16:21:32"
console.log( formatDate('Y-m-d', new Date(2000000000000)) ); // "2033-05-18"

Gist

Here is a gist with an updated version of the formatDate() function and additional examples: https://gist.github.com/stracker-phil/c7b68ea0b1d5bbb97af0a6a3dc66e0d9

Landers answered 21/5, 2019 at 14:49 Comment(0)
S
1

function myYmd(D){
    var pad = function(num) {
        var s = '0' + num;
        return s.substr(s.length - 2);
    }
    var Result = D.getFullYear() + '-' + pad((D.getMonth() + 1)) + '-' + pad(D.getDate());
    return Result;
}

var datemilli = new Date('Sun May 11,2014');
document.write(myYmd(datemilli));
Sike answered 19/12, 2016 at 8:38 Comment(0)
C
1

This worked for me to get the current date in the desired format (YYYYMMDD HH:MM:SS):

var d = new Date();

var date1 = d.getFullYear() + '' +
            ((d.getMonth()+1) < 10 ? "0" + (d.getMonth() + 1) : (d.getMonth() + 1)) +
            '' +
            (d.getDate() < 10 ? "0" + d.getDate() : d.getDate());

var time1 = (d.getHours() < 10 ? "0" + d.getHours() : d.getHours()) +
            ':' +
            (d.getMinutes() < 10 ? "0" + d.getMinutes() : d.getMinutes()) +
            ':' +
            (d.getSeconds() < 10 ? "0" + d.getSeconds() : d.getSeconds());

print(date1+' '+time1);
Caladium answered 10/10, 2018 at 6:36 Comment(0)
B
1

var d = new Date("Sun May 1,2014");

var year  = d.getFullYear();
var month = d.getMonth() + 1;
var day   = d.getDate(); 

month = checkZero(month);             
day   = checkZero(day);

var date = "";

date += year;
date += "-";
date += month;
date += "-";
date += day;

document.querySelector("#display").innerHTML = date;
    
function checkZero(i) 
{
    if (i < 10) 
    {
        i = "0" + i
    };  // add zero in front of numbers < 10

    return i;
}
<div id="display"></div>
Background answered 6/1, 2019 at 10:24 Comment(0)
J
1
new Date(new Date(YOUR_DATE.toISOString()).getTime() - 
                 (YOUR_DATE.getTimezoneOffset() * 60 * 1000)).toISOString().substr(0, 10)
Jequirity answered 1/3, 2019 at 3:22 Comment(0)
C
1

No library is needed

Just pure JavaScript.

The example below gets the last two months from today:

var d = new Date()
d.setMonth(d.getMonth() - 2);
var dateString = new Date(d);
console.log('Before Format', dateString, 'After format', dateString.toISOString().slice(0,10))
Ce answered 15/3, 2019 at 11:19 Comment(2)
Dangerous. In that case you ignore the timezone offset.Sacring
Where by dangerous you mean, returns the wrong date for several hours every day?Anniceannie
D
0

If the date needs to be the same across all time zones, for example represents some value from the database, then be sure to use UTC versions of the day, month, fullyear functions on the JavaScript date object as this will display in UTC time and avoid off-by-one errors in certain time zones.

Even better, use the Moment.js date library for this sort of formatting.

Deaconry answered 11/5, 2014 at 14:45 Comment(0)
C
0

Format and finding maximum and minimum date from hashmap data:

var obj = {"a":'2001-15-01', "b": '2001-12-02' , "c": '2001-1-03'};

function findMaxMinDate(obj){
  let formatEncode = (id)=> { let s = id.split('-'); return `${s[0]+'-'+s[2]+'-'+s[1]}`}
  let formatDecode = (id)=> { let s = id.split('/'); return `${s[2]+'-'+s[0]+'-'+s[1]}`}
  let arr = Object.keys( obj ).map(( key )=> { return new Date(formatEncode(obj[key])); });
  let min = new Date(Math.min.apply(null, arr)).toLocaleDateString();
  let max = new Date(Math.max.apply(null, arr)).toLocaleDateString();
  return {maxd: `${formatDecode(max)}`, mind:`${formatDecode(min)}`}
}

console.log(findMaxMinDate(obj));
Cupola answered 15/3, 2019 at 10:43 Comment(1)
How is this related to the question (formatting a date)?Cellule
O
0

This code change the order of DD MM YYYY

function convertDate(format, date) {
    let formatArray = format.split('/');
    if (formatArray.length != 3) {
        console.error('Use a valid Date format');
        return;
    }
    function getType(type) { return type == 'DD' ? d.getDate() : type == 'MM' ? d.getMonth() + 1 : type == 'YYYY' && d.getFullYear(); }
    function pad(s) { return (s < 10) ? '0' + s : s; }
    var d = new Date(date);
    return [pad(getType(formatArray[0])), pad(getType(formatArray[1])), getType(formatArray[2])].join('/');
}
Oona answered 5/3, 2020 at 21:22 Comment(0)
P
0

const today = new Date(); // or whatever 

const yearFirstFormater = (date): string => {
    const modifiedDate = new Date(date).toISOString().slice(0, 10);
    return `${modifiedDate.split('-')[0]}/${modifiedDate.split('-')[1]}/${modifiedDate.split('-')[2]}`;
}

const monthFirstFormater = (date): string => {
    const modifiedDate = new Date(date).toISOString().slice(0, 10);
    return `${modifiedDate.split('-')[1]}/${modifiedDate.split('-')[2]}/${modifiedDate.split('-')[0]}`;
}

const dayFirstFormater = (date): string => {
    const modifiedDate = new Date(date).toISOString().slice(0, 10);
    return `${modifiedDate.split('-')[2]}/${modifiedDate.split('-')[1]}/${modifiedDate.split('-')[0]}`;
}

console.log(yearFirstFormater(today));
console.log(monthFirstFormater(today));
console.log(dayFirstFormater(today));
Paleoclimatology answered 2/5, 2020 at 2:53 Comment(0)
F
0
formatDate(date) {
  const d = new Date(date)
  const ye = new Intl.DateTimeFormat('en', { year: 'numeric' }).format(d);
  const mo = new Intl.DateTimeFormat('en', { month: 'short' }).format(d);
  const da = new Intl.DateTimeFormat('en', { day: '2-digit' }).format(d);
  return `${da}-${mo}-${ye}`;
}

console.log("Formatated Date : ", formatDate("09/25/2020") )
// Output :: Formatated Date : 25-Sep-2020
Farceuse answered 10/9, 2020 at 7:4 Comment(0)
C
0

Follow up on https://mcmap.net/q/37097/-format-javascript-date-as-yyyy-mm-dd This is what I had to change regarding the offset for when people are east or west from the Greenwich Mean Time:

export const toNativeHtml5InputDate = (date) => {
  if (!date) return date;

  let offset = new Date(date).getTimezoneOffset();

  offset =
    offset < 0
      ? offset * -1 // east from Greenwich Mean Time
      : offset; // west from Greenwich Mean Time

  return new Date(new Date(date).getTime() + offset * 60 * 1000)
    .toISOString()
    .split('T')[0];
};
Conglobate answered 24/3, 2021 at 9:24 Comment(0)
E
-1

All given answers are great and helped me big. In my situation, I wanted to get the current date in yyyy mm dd format along with date-1. Here is what worked for me.

var endDate = new Date().toISOString().slice(0, 10); // To get the Current Date in YYYY MM DD Format

var newstartDate = new Date();
newstartDate.setDate(newstartDate.getDate() - 1);
var startDate = newstartDate.toISOString().slice(0, 10); // To get the Yesterday's Date in YYYY MM DD Format
alert(startDate);
Europium answered 13/7, 2017 at 14:10 Comment(0)
C
-1

I modified Samit Satpute's response as follows:

var newstartDate = new Date();
// newstartDate.setDate(newstartDate.getDate() - 1);
var startDate = newstartDate.toISOString().replace(/[-T:\.Z]/g, ""); //.slice(0, 10); // To get the Yesterday's Date in YYYY MM DD Format
console.log(startDate);
Comenius answered 4/10, 2017 at 15:46 Comment(0)
N
-3

It is easily accomplished by my date-shortcode package:

const dateShortcode = require('date-shortcode')
dateShortcode.parse('{YYYY-MM-DD}', 'Sun May 11,2014')
//=> '2014-05-11'
Ninnetta answered 4/3, 2018 at 18:55 Comment(1)
I really don't get the downvotes. This is definitely a way to accomplish what OP was asking.Ninnetta
I
-6

We run constantly into problems like this. Every solution looks so individual. But looking at php, we have a way dealing with different formats. And there is a port of php's strtotime function at https://locutus.io/php/datetime/strtotime/. A small open source npm package from me as an alternative way:

<script type="module">
import { datebob } from "@dipser/datebob.js";
console.log( datebob('Sun May 11, 2014').format('Y-m-d') ); 
</script>

See datebob.js

Infantile answered 25/5, 2020 at 12:25 Comment(0)
K
-6

Use joda-js and be done with it:

import { DateTimeFormatter, LocalDateTime } from 'js-joda'

const now = LocalDateTime.now()
now.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern('yyyyMMdd-HH:mm:ss'))
// Outputs: 20221104-09:25:09 according to your timezone (mine is 'America/New_York'
Kinser answered 4/11, 2022 at 13:38 Comment(0)
B
-8

This worked for me, and you can paste this directly into your HTML if needed for testing:

<script type="text/javascript">
    if (datefield.type!="date"){ // If the browser doesn't support input type="date",
                                 // initialize date picker widget:
        jQuery(function($){ // On document.ready
            $('#Date').datepicker({
                dateFormat: 'yy-mm-dd', // THIS IS THE IMPORTANT PART!!!
                showOtherMonths: true,
                selectOtherMonths: true,
                changeMonth: true,
                minDate: '2016-10-19',
                maxDate: '2016-11-03'
            });
        })
    }
</script>
Beauharnais answered 20/10, 2016 at 19:12 Comment(0)

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