15

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?

1
  • 2
    Please don't use w3schools as a reference. For ECMAScript issues, please reference the standard, e.g. for Date.prototype.toJSON.
    – RobG
    Jul 8, 2012 at 11:53

2 Answers 2

18

Date objects in ECMAScript are internally UTC. The timezone offset is used for local times.

The specification for Date.prototype.toJSON says that it uses Date.prototype.toISOString, which states that "the timezone is always UTC". What your solution is doing is offsetting the UTC time value of the date object by the timezone offset.

Consider adding your own method to Date.prototype, e.g.

Date.prototype.toJSONLocal = function() {
  function addZ(n) {
    return (n<10? '0' : '') + n;
  }
  return this.getFullYear() + '-' + 
         addZ(this.getMonth() + 1) + '-' + 
         addZ(this.getDate());
} 

Edit

If you want to squeeze extra performance, the following should be faster:

Date.prototype.toJSONLocal = (function() {
    function addZ(n) {
        return (n<10? '0' : '') + n;
    }
    return function() {
      return this.getFullYear() + '-' +
             addZ(this.getMonth() + 1) + '-' +
             addZ(this.getDate());
    };
}())

But that smacks of premature optimisation, so unless you are calling it thousands of times in a very short period, I wouldn't bother.

5
  • Ok this is what I should do from the beginning, so I'll mark your answer, but can you tell me if this code is faster in terms of execution: Date.prototype.toJSONLocal = function() { var local = new Date(this); local.setHours( this.getHours()+(this.getTimezoneOffset()/-60) ); return local.toJSON().slice(0, 10); }
    – simo
    Jul 8, 2012 at 12:40
  • Well the code is here: jsfiddle.net/simo/F4VuF I don't seem to get the code blocks in comments here..
    – simo
    Jul 8, 2012 at 12:48
  • 2
    Since the timezone offset is returned in minutes, you can use the somewhat simpler and shorter local.setMinutes(this.getMinutes() - this.getTimezoneOffset());. Note also that timezones aren't all even hours (some are 15 minutes), using minutes keeps everything as integers. As for peformance, you'll need to test in different browsers. But I suspect that unless you're calling it thousands of times, speed is moot.
    – RobG
    Jul 8, 2012 at 23:28
  • Oh, and one reason to not use toJSON is that it's an ES5 method so not supported by older browsers, whereas ECMA-262 ed 3 support is ubiquitous.
    – RobG
    Jul 8, 2012 at 23:33
  • Yes, if you have to support IE6 or IE7, you'll want to shim in support for .toJSON(). JScript 5.8 support, IE8 includes JScript 5.8
    – brianary
    Dec 30, 2013 at 23:23
0

I haven't noticed that the toJSON method don't take into account your timezone offset

But it does, it converts the local-time to Zulu (look at the end of the string: Z)

new Date( "2012-01-02T03:04:05+02:00" ).toJSON()
"2012-01-02T01:04:05.000Z"
3
  • Alright but I want my date in YYYY-MM-DD format as easy as possible. What toJSON returns by default isn't working for me.
    – simo
    Jul 8, 2012 at 11:27
  • You can only get year / month / day in the client time-zone and / or in UTC. In all other time-zones you need to convert manually (form UTC), or parse the date in php considering the time-zone it contains.
    – pozs
    Jul 8, 2012 at 11:56
  • 1
    toJSON doesn't "convert the local time to Zulu", Date objects are always in UTC, it's when presenting dates in human readable form that they consider the local timezone offset to show a local time.
    – RobG
    Jul 8, 2012 at 12:11

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