62

I am getting data from a database and displaying it:

    <ul>
       <li ng-repeat="item in items>
          <mydate>{{item.date}}</mydate>
        </li>
    </ul>

Where {{item.date}} is a Unix date such as 1374843600. How can I set the date format using AngularJS directives? Is it possible?

When I tried to do it, I was getting a value of tag mydate -{{item.date}}

1
  • Could you change your answer? The given answer displays the wrong time by a factor of 1000. See Sergei Basharov's answer.
    – Joe B.
    May 28, 2017 at 4:58

6 Answers 6

217

I have faced the issue with unix time formatted as a number of seconds from the epoch start or as a number of milliseconds that is used in JavaScript. So strictly speaking, AngularJS doesn't convert Unix timestamp to Date, but a number with milliseconds, which is 1000 times larger, so first you will have to multiply your input number by 1000, like this:

<mydate>{{item.date * 1000 | date:'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss Z'}}</mydate>

Otherwise your date will be wrong.

7
  • 6
    Thanks for your post. I was struggling with this too, and had no idea angular/javascript counts the milliseconds and not seconds. The unix time is universal and is the SECONDS after the big bang...
    – pat
    Nov 21, 2013 at 18:04
  • I could have spent hours without coming to your answer. Thanks!
    – MarcoS
    Feb 14, 2015 at 23:09
  • Thanks for the great answer, exactly what I needed. It's amazing how relevant these questions stay, even two years later! Angular can be really frustrating some times Apr 16, 2015 at 6:44
  • 2
    @stormpat Unix Time is not the number of Seconds after the BigBang. Its only the number of seconds after 00:00:00 Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), Thursday, 1 January 1970. I dont think Bigbang happened only 1432897853 seconds ago.
    – Neel
    May 29, 2015 at 12:12
  • 1
    @Neel: i strongly disagree! Are you really trying to convince us that there was anything before Jan 1, 1970?! You must be joking! Mar 9, 2016 at 10:08
90

Use format date filter like this:

<mydate>{{item.date * 1000 | date:'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss Z'}}</mydate>

Reference

1
  • 2
    NO. Downvoted. The question asks specifically for a unix timestamp which is NOT milliseconds - it's SECONDS. You must multiply the unix timestamp by 1000 like this: <mydate>{{item.date * 1000 | date:'yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss Z'}}</mydate> Sep 13, 2017 at 4:38
5

If you have a Unix timestamp, you'll probably have to multiply your timestamp by 1000 since the Unix timestamp is in seconds and AngularJs date filter needs milliseconds.

vm.milliseconds = Date('1441981121' * 1000);

then use $filter() function

var date = $filter('date')(vm.milliseconds, 'd MMMM yyyy');

or you can use in ng-bind

<span ng-bind="myController.milliseconds | date : 'd MMMM yyyy'"></span>
3

You should use the date filter that is already provided by angular: here

3
 yourapp.filter('timestampToDate', function () {
    return function (timestamp) {
        var date = new Date(timestamp * 1000);
        var dateObject = date.getFullYear() +'/'+ ('0' + (date.getMonth() + 1)).slice(-2) +'/'+ ('0' + date.getDate()).slice(-2);
        return dateObject;
    };
});

Usage:
{{timestamp | timestampToDate}}

1

There is directive to that called rsTime.

    <rs-time start-time="1478513323" digital-format="'ddd MMM d h:mm TT'"></rs-time>

Check demo at Plunker .

Below are different formates of time:

 M/d/y -  11/7/2016

 HH:mm:ss - 16:02:31 (24hrs formate)

 hh:mm:ss TT - 04:03:10 PM

 ddd MMM d h:mm TT  - Mon Nov 7 at 4:04 PM

For documentation visit Github

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