JSPM

  • ESM via JSPM
  • ES Module Entrypoint
  • Export Map
  • Keywords
  • License
  • Repository URL
  • TypeScript Types
  • README
  • Created
  • Published
  • Downloads 23967
  • Score
    100M100P100Q136142F
  • License MIT

A node.js package for Steven Levithan's excellent dateFormat() function.

Package Exports

  • dateformat-light

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (dateformat-light) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

dateformat-light

A node.js package for Steven Levithan's excellent dateFormat() function.

Modifications

1.3.2

  • Fix issue when applying function in Safari to strings missing timezone designator.

1.3.1

1.3.0

  • Add placeholder 'p' to format timezone with colon

1.2.1

1.2.0

  • Add ability to localize AM/PM strings

1.1.0

  • Add placeholder 'VV' for zero-padded variant of ISO 8601 week number

1.0.14

  • Lazy evaluation of more expensive placeholders to improve performance in most cases where these placeholders are not used.
  • Allow both "" and '' for literals

1.0.13

  • Add placeholder 'G' for week year according to ISO 8601.
  • Add placeholder 'V' for week number according to ISO 8601
  • Removed CLI and fixed AMD include definition

1.0.11

  • Removed the Date.prototype.format method. Sorry folks, but extending native prototypes is for suckers.
  • Added a module.exports = dateFormat; statement at the bottom
  • Added the placeholder N to get the ISO 8601 numeric representation of the day of the week

Installation

$ npm install dateformat-light

Usage

As taken from Steven's post, modified to match the Modifications listed above:

var dateFormat = require('dateformat');
var now = new Date();

// Basic usage
dateFormat(now, "dddd, mmmm dS, yyyy, h:MM:ss TT");
// Saturday, June 9th, 2007, 5:46:21 PM

// You can use one of several named masks
dateFormat(now, "isoDateTime");
// 2007-06-09T17:46:21

// ...Or add your own
dateFormat.masks.hammerTime = 'HH:MM! "Can\'t touch this!"';
dateFormat(now, "hammerTime");
// 17:46! Can't touch this!

// You can also provide the date as a string
dateFormat("Jun 9 2007", "fullDate");
// Saturday, June 9, 2007

// Note that if you don't include the mask argument,
// dateFormat.masks.default is used
dateFormat(now);
// Sat Jun 09 2007 17:46:21

// And if you don't include the date argument,
// the current date and time is used
dateFormat();
// Sat Jun 09 2007 17:46:22

// You can also skip the date argument (as long as your mask doesn't
// contain any numbers), in which case the current date/time is used
dateFormat("longTime");
// 5:46:22 PM EST

// And finally, you can convert local time to UTC time. Simply pass in
// true as an additional argument (no argument skipping allowed in this case):
dateFormat(now, "longTime", true);
// 10:46:21 PM UTC

// ...Or add the prefix "UTC:" or "GMT:" to your mask.
dateFormat(now, "UTC:h:MM:ss TT Z");
// 10:46:21 PM UTC

// You can also get the ISO 8601 week of the year:
dateFormat(now, "W");
// 42

// You can also get the ISO 8601 week year:
dateFormat(now, "G");
// 2007

// and also get the ISO 8601 numeric representation of the day of the week:
dateFormat(now,"N");
// 6

Mask options

Mask Description
d Day of the month as digits; no leading zero for single-digit days.
dd Day of the month as digits; leading zero for single-digit days.
ddd Day of the week as a three-letter abbreviation.
dddd Day of the week as its full name.
m Month as digits; no leading zero for single-digit months.
mm Month as digits; leading zero for single-digit months.
mmm Month as a three-letter abbreviation.
mmmm Month as its full name.
yy Year as last two digits; leading zero for years less than 10.
yyyy Year represented by four digits.
h Hours; no leading zero for single-digit hours (12-hour clock).
hh Hours; leading zero for single-digit hours (12-hour clock).
H Hours; no leading zero for single-digit hours (24-hour clock).
HH Hours; leading zero for single-digit hours (24-hour clock).
M Minutes; no leading zero for single-digit minutes.
MM Minutes; leading zero for single-digit minutes.
N ISO 8601 numeric representation of the day of the week.
o GMT/UTC timezone offset, e.g. -0500 or +0230.
p GMT/UTC timezone offset, e.g. -05:00 or +02:30.
s Seconds; no leading zero for single-digit seconds.
ss Seconds; leading zero for single-digit seconds.
S The date's ordinal suffix (st, nd, rd, or th). Works well with d.
l Milliseconds; gives 3 digits.
L Milliseconds; gives 2 digits.
t Lowercase, single-character time marker string: a or p.
tt Lowercase, two-character time marker string: am or pm.
T Uppercase, single-character time marker string: A or P.
TT Uppercase, two-character time marker string: AM or PM.
W ISO 8601 week number of the year, e.g. 42
V ISO 8601 week number of the year, e.g. 42
VV ISO 8601 week number of the year with leading zero for single-digit weeks, e.g. 09
G ISO 8601 week year. Previous year for last days of last week and next year for first days of first week.
Z US timezone abbreviation, e.g. EST or MDT. With non-US timezones or in the
'...', "..." Literal character sequence. Surrounding quotes are removed.
UTC: Must be the first four characters of the mask. Converts the date from local time to UTC/GMT/Zulu time before applying the mask. The "UTC:" prefix is removed.

Named Formats

Name Mask Example
default ddd mmm dd yyyy HH:MM:ss Sat Jun 09 2007 17:46:21
shortDate m/d/yy 6/9/07
mediumDate mmm d, yyyy Jun 9, 2007
longDate mmmm d, yyyy June 9, 2007
fullDate dddd, mmmm d, yyyy Saturday, June 9, 2007
shortTime h:MM TT 5:46 PM
mediumTime h:MM:ss TT 5:46:21 PM
longTime h:MM:ss TT Z 5:46:21 PM EST
isoDate yyyy-mm-dd 2007-06-09
isoTime HH:MM:ss 17:46:21
isoDateTime yyyy-mm-dd'T'HH:MM:sso 2007-06-09T17:46:21+0700
isoUtcDateTime UTC:yyyy-mm-dd'T'HH:MM:ss'Z' 2007-06-09T22:46:21Z

Localization

Day names, month names and the AM/PM indicators can be localized by passing an object with the necessary strings. For example:

var dateFormat = require('dateformat');
dateFormat.i18n = {
    dayNames: [
        'Sun', 'Mon', 'Tue', 'Wed', 'Thu', 'Fri', 'Sat',
        'Sunday', 'Monday', 'Tuesday', 'Wednesday', 'Thursday', 'Friday', 'Saturday'
    ],
    monthNames: [
        'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun', 'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec',
        'January', 'February', 'March', 'April', 'May', 'June', 'July', 'August', 'September', 'October', 'November', 'December'
    ],
    timeNames: [
        'a', 'p', 'am', 'pm', 'A', 'P', 'AM', 'PM'
    ]
};

It is possible to just override one of the arrays, and if you like to reset to the default just set i18n to null or empty object

var dateFormat = require('dateformat');
dateFormat.i18n = null;

License

(c) 2007-2009 Steven Levithan stevenlevithan.com, MIT license.