Well the problem is that I was using code like this:
new Date().toJSON().slice(0, 10)
to get my date as YYYY-MM-DD
string, then I use it like parameter in some mysql queries and in some condition statements. In the end of the day I wasn't getting the right date since it was still in the previous day (my timezone offset is +2/3 hours).
I haven't noticed that the toJSON
method does not take into account your timezone offset, so I've ended up with this hacky solution:
var today = new Date();
today.setHours( today.getHours()+(today.getTimezoneOffset()/-60) );
console.log(today.toJSON().slice(0, 10));
Is there a more elegant solution?
- Here is the test code: http://jsfiddle.net/simo/qwhYw/
- JavaScript toJSON Method
- JavaScript Date Object