Change ISO Date String to Date Object - JavaScript
Do not pass strings to the Date constructor, it is notoriously bad at parsing strings. IE 8, for one, will not parse ISO 8601 format strings at all and return NaN. It's really simple to write your own parser:
function parseISOString(s) {
var b = s.split(/\D+/);
return new Date(Date.UTC(b[0], --b[1], b[2], b[3], b[4], b[5], b[6]));
}
Note also that if the time is 19:38:34.203 UTC and your timezone is UTC +0530, then the time in that timezone is 01:08:34 am on the following day, hence the difference in dates. For example, for a person on the east coast of Australia but not observing daylight saving (i.e. UTC +10), it's equivalent to:
4 November, 2014 05:38:34
Edit
So if you want to return it to an ISO date, you can use the getISO* methods to create whatever format that suits, e.g.
function isoFormatDMY(d) {
function pad(n) {return (n<10? '0' : '') + n}
return pad(d.getUTCDate()) + '/' + pad(d.getUTCMonth() + 1) + '/' + d.getUTCFullYear();
}
var s = '2014-11-03T19:38:34.203Z';
var date = parseISOString(s);
console.log(isoFormatDMY(date)) // 03/11/2014
or use ES5's toISOString:
parseISOString('2014-11-03T19:38:34.203Z').toISOString(); // 2014-11-03T19:38:34.203Z
A simple polyfill for pre ES5 browsers:
if (!Date.prototype.toISOString) {
Date.prototype.toISOString = function() {
var d = this;
// Padding functions
function pad(n) {return (n<10? '0' : '') + n}
function padd(n){return (n<100? '0' : '') + pad(n)}
return d.getUTCFullYear() + '-' + pad(d.getUTCMonth() + 1) + '-' + pad(d.getUTCDate()) +
'T' + pad(d.getUTCHours()) + ':' + pad(d.getUTCMinutes()) + ':' +
pad(d.getUTCSeconds()) + '.' + padd(d.getMilliseconds()) + 'Z';
}
}
You can use "getUTCDate()" to get actual date.
var d = new Date('2014-11-03T19:38:34.203Z');
var n = d.getUTCDate();
But it will return only date. to get month "getUTCMonth()" and to get year "getUTCFullYear()". Then construct all in to your format. For example
var n=[];
var d = new Date('2014-11-03T19:38:34.203Z');
var s = d.getUTCDate();
n.push(s);
s=d.getUTCMonth();
n.push(s);
s=d.getUTCFullYear();
n.push(s);
Finally make n
as an object.
I also did not care about timestamp/timezone as I am returning only dates from SQL in ISO format. To avoid the day being either one ahead or one behind when converting to Date object, this works:
moment(ISOStringHere, 'YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm'); // leaving off Z makes it UTC to match database
This requires the Moment JS library located here:
https://momentjs.com/