This content originally appeared on Go Make Things and was authored by Go Make Things
Today’s article is adapted from my new Vanilla JS Short’s on working with Dates & Times.
Yesterday, we looked at how to work with dates and times in vanilla JS. Today, we’re going to learn how to get values from a Date
object.
Let’s dig in!
Date
object instance methods
The Date
object provides methods for getting details about the moment in time.
These methods follow a Date.prototype.get*()
naming convention, where *
is the property to get. All of the returned values are local to the user’s timezone.
The Date.prototype.getMonth()
method returns an integer for the month, starting with 0
for January. The Date.prototype.getDay()
method returns an integer for the day of the week, starting with 0
for Sunday.
// Halloween at 10pm
let halloween = new Date('2023-10-31T22:00:00');
// Get the year
// returns 2023
let year = halloween.getFullYear();
// Get the month
// returns 9
let month = halloween.getMonth();
// Get the day of the month
// returns 31
let date = halloween.getDate();
// Get the day of the week
// returns 2
let day = halloween.getDay();
// Get the hour of the day (in 24-hour format)
// returns 22
let hour = halloween.getHours();
// Get the minutes
// returns 0
let minutes = halloween.getMinutes();
// Get the seconds
// returns 0
let seconds = halloween.getSeconds();
// Get the milliseconds
// returns 0
let milliseconds = halloween.getMilliseconds();
Getting the Date
as a string
The Date
object also has a handful of methods for converting a date and time into a string.
Oddly, the toISOString()
and toJSON()
methods both return an ISO string. The toJSON()
method does not return JSON.
// Halloween at 10pm
let halloween = new Date('2023-10-31T22:00:00');
// Get the full date object as a string
// returns "Tue Oct 31 2023 22:00:00 GMT-0400 (Eastern Daylight Time)"
let str = halloween.toString();
// Get the date portion of the date object as a string
// returns "Tue Oct 31 2023"
let dateStr = halloween.toDateString();
// Get the ISO 8601 string for a date in UTC/GMT
// returns "2023-11-01T02:00:00.000Z"
let isoStr = halloween.toISOString();
// Also returns the ISO 8601 string for a date
// NOT JSON!
// returns "2023-11-01T02:00:00.000Z"
let jsonStr = halloween.toJSON();
Formatting Date strings
Tomorrow, we’re going to look at how you can pair the Date
object with the Internationalization API to create formatted date and time strings.
Is there a JavaScript or web development topic you'd like to learn more about? Send me an email and let me know.
This content originally appeared on Go Make Things and was authored by Go Make Things
Go Make Things | Sciencx (2023-04-13T14:30:00+00:00) How to get Date values with vanilla JavaScript. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2023/04/13/how-to-get-date-values-with-vanilla-javascript/
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