This solution is cross-browser and cleaner int/string conversion. My advice is to not use a variable named 'date' with code like date = Date(...)
where you're relying heavily on language case sensitivity (it works, but risky when you're working with server/browser code in different languages with different rules). So assuming the JavaScript Date in a var current_date
:
mins = ('0'+current_date.getMinutes()).slice(-2);
The technique is take the rightmost 2 characters (slice(-2))
of "0" prepended onto the string value of getMinutes()
. So:
"0"+"12" -> "012".slice(-2) -> "12"
and
"0"+"1" -> "01".slice(-2) -> "01"
.getMinutes()
is an integer, you can't access.length
from an integer. To accomplish that (not recommended when dealing with dates) is parsing the number to a string and then checking the length. E.g.:date.getMinutes().toString().length