Given "3:00 AM" or "7:00 PM", are there built in functions (like Date) for me to convert these into milliseconds? 3:00 AM would be 3 hours in milliseconds, while 7:00 PM would be 19 hours in milliseconds.
-
I could be wrong but is this not covered in: stackoverflow.com/questions/10944396/…– Brian LangbeckerMay 8, 2013 at 0:34
-
@BrianLangbecker, Not exactly the same because the current question involves parsing the time string. Also it tries to calculate the milliseconds elapsed for a specific time, not the current time elapsed since midnight.– plalxMay 8, 2013 at 2:33
1 Answer
I dont think there is any built-in function for this, however it would not be complicated to achieve what you want.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date
First, create a date with 0 elapsed milliseconds:
var d = new Date(0);
Parse your time string and set the hours of the date accordingly:
var t = timeString.match(/(\d{1,2}):(\d{2}) ([AP]M)/),
h = parseInt(t[1], 10),
isAm = t[3] === 'AM',
isMidnight = h === 12 && isAm,
isNoon = h === 12 && !isAm;
d.setUTCHours(isMidnight? 0 : h + (isAm || isNoon? 0 : 12), parseInt(t[2], 10));
Use the getTime
function to get the milliseconds:
console.log(d.getTime()); //10800000
Here's a re-usable function:
function getTimeMilliseconds(timeString) {
var t = timeString.match(/(\d{1,2}):(\d{2}) ([AP]M)/),
h = parseInt(t[1], 10),
isAm = t[3] === 'AM',
isMidnight = h === 12 && isAm,
isNoon = h === 12 && !isAm;
return new Date(0).setUTCHours(isMidnight? 0 : h + (isAm || isNoon? 0 : 12), parseInt(t[2], 10));
}
getTimeMilliseconds('3:00 AM');
Note that you don't really need the Date
object to achieve this, but I use it because it does the math for you, however you could always do hours * 3600000 + minutes * 60000
.
function getTimeMilliseconds(timeString) {
var t = timeString.match(/(\d{1,2}):(\d{2}) ([AP]M)/),
h = parseInt(t[1], 10),
isAm = t[3] === 'AM',
isMidnight = h === 12 && isAm,
isNoon = h === 12 && !isAm;
return (isMidnight? 0 : h + (isAm || isNoon? 0 : 12)) * 3600000 + parseInt(t[2], 10) * 60000;
}
-
Doesn't work for
12:00 PM
(which should be 12 hours, but will be counted as 24.) May 8, 2013 at 18:09 -
Thanks for the answer, @plalx . I guess functions like these are not built in because AM and PM is an english thing. May 9, 2013 at 6:23