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Suppose a user of your website enters a date range.

2009-1-1 to 2009-1-3

You need to send this date to a server for some processing, but the server expects all dates and times to be in UTC.

Now suppose the user is in Alaska or Hawaii or Fiji. Since they are in a timezone quite different from UTC, the date range needs to be converted to something like this:

2009-1-1T8:00:00 to 2009-1-4T7:59:59

Using the JavaScript Date object, how would you convert the first "localized" date range into something the server will understand?

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4 Answers

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I just discovered that the 1.2.3 version of Steven Levithan's date.format.js does just what I want. It allows you to supply a format string for a JavaScript date and will convert from local time to UTC. Here's the code I'm using now:

// JavaScript dates don't like hyphens!    
var rectifiedDateText = dateText.replace(/-/g, "/");
var d = new Date(rectifiedDateText);

// Using a predefined mask from date.format.js.
var convertedDate = dateFormat(d, 'isoUtcDateTime');
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Date.prototype.toUTCArray= function(){
    var D= this;
    return [D.getUTCFullYear(), D.getUTCMonth(), D.getUTCDate(), D.getUTCHours(),
    D.getUTCMinutes(), D.getUTCSeconds()];
}

Date.prototype.toISO= function(){
    var tem, A= this.toUTCArray(), i= 0;
    A[1]+= 1;
    while(i++<7){
        tem= A[i];
        if(tem<10) A[i]= '0'+tem;
    }
    return A.splice(0, 3).join('-')+'T'+A.join(':');    
}
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This works well. I just needed to replace the "-" in my source dates to "/" in order to create a JavaScript date, then I could call your toISO() function to get the correct output. – dthrasher Jun 4 at 15:41
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Are you trying to convert the date into a string like that?

I'd make a function to do that, and, though it's slightly controversial, add it to the Date prototype. If you're not comfortable with doing that, then you can put it as a standalone function, passing the date as a parameter.

Date.prototype.getISOString = function() {
    var zone = '', temp = -this.getTimezoneOffset() / 60 * 100;
    if (temp >= 0) zone += "+";
    zone += (Math.abs(temp) < 100 ? "00" : (Math.abs(temp) < 1000 ? "0" : "")) + temp;

    // "2009-6-4T14:7:32+10:00"
    return this.getFullYear()   // 2009
         + "-"
         + (this.getMonth() + 1) // 6
         + "-"
         + this.getDate()       // 4
         + "T"
         + this.getHours()      // 14
         + ":"
         + this.getMinutes()    // 7
         + ":"
         + this.getSeconds()    // 32
         + zone.substr(0, 3)    // +10
         + ":"
         + temp.substr(-2)      // 00
    ;
};

If you needed it in UTC time, just replace all the get* functions with getUTC*, eg: getUTCFullYear, getUTCMonth, getUTCHours... and then just add "+00:00" at the end instead of the user's timezone offset.

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var myDate = new Date(); // Set this to your date in whichever timezone.
var utcDate = myDate.toUTCString();
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this returns NaN for me.. – nickf Jun 4 at 4:01
The date object needs to actually be set to a date. Above is just an example. – James Skidmore Jun 4 at 4:04
1  
Now it returns "Thu, 04 Jun 2009 04:10:56 GMT", which isn't the ISO format required in the OP. – nickf Jun 4 at 4:11

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