1266

Say I have an array of a few objects:

var array = [{id: 1, date: Mar 12 2012 10:00:00 AM}, {id: 2, date: Mar 8 2012 08:00:00 AM}];

How can I sort this array by the date element in order from the date closest to the current date and time down? Keep in mind that the array may have many objects, but for the sake of simplicity I used 2.

Would I use the sort function and a custom comparator?

5
  • If you use Date constructor, check this first stackoverflow.com/questions/5619202/…
    – toshi
    Aug 17, 2019 at 9:06
  • 2
    the quickest way is to use the isomorphic sort-array module which works natively in both browser and node, supporting any type of input, computed fields and custom sort orders.
    – Lloyd
    Oct 21, 2019 at 20:28
  • 3
    It seems like this question hasn't been answered. None of the answers below explain how to " order from the date closest to the current date".
    – d13
    Nov 18, 2021 at 16:15
  • not directly related, but if someone is trying to sort data fetched from a DB, this should be done in the SQL query.
    – Fed
    Oct 8, 2022 at 12:28
  • @Fed No it shouldn't. That depends entirely on the situation. There are plenty of situations where sorting on the client makes sense even if this particular piece of data comes from a database.
    – glennsl
    Jun 26, 2023 at 14:05

25 Answers 25

2172

Simplest Answer

array.sort(function(a,b){
  // Turn your strings into dates, and then subtract them
  // to get a value that is either negative, positive, or zero.
  return new Date(b.date) - new Date(a.date);
});

More Generic Answer

array.sort(function(o1,o2){
  if (sort_o1_before_o2)    return -1;
  else if(sort_o1_after_o2) return  1;
  else                      return  0;
});

Or more tersely:

array.sort(function(o1,o2){
  return sort_o1_before_o2 ? -1 : sort_o1_after_o2 ? 1 : 0;
});

Generic, Powerful Answer

Define a custom non-enumerable sortBy function using a Schwartzian transform on all arrays :

(function(){
  if (typeof Object.defineProperty === 'function'){
    try{Object.defineProperty(Array.prototype,'sortBy',{value:sb}); }catch(e){}
  }
  if (!Array.prototype.sortBy) Array.prototype.sortBy = sb;

  function sb(f){
    for (var i=this.length;i;){
      var o = this[--i];
      this[i] = [].concat(f.call(o,o,i),o);
    }
    this.sort(function(a,b){
      for (var i=0,len=a.length;i<len;++i){
        if (a[i]!=b[i]) return a[i]<b[i]?-1:1;
      }
      return 0;
    });
    for (var i=this.length;i;){
      this[--i]=this[i][this[i].length-1];
    }
    return this;
  }
})();

Use it like so:

array.sortBy(function(o){ return o.date });

If your date is not directly comparable, make a comparable date out of it, e.g.

array.sortBy(function(o){ return new Date( o.date ) });

You can also use this to sort by multiple criteria if you return an array of values:

// Sort by date, then score (reversed), then name
array.sortBy(function(o){ return [ o.date, -o.score, o.name ] };

See http://phrogz.net/JS/Array.prototype.sortBy.js for more details.

17
  • 8
    Why just not return b-a; in the Simple Answer?
    – corbacho
    Feb 3, 2014 at 9:33
  • 113
    Do not recommend creating new Date objects inside the sort method. Have hit production performance issues specifically for that reason. Do not allocate memory (and GC) inside a sort method.
    – MikeMurko
    Jul 13, 2019 at 5:26
  • 20
    the first eg syntax gives error on angular7 : The left-hand side of an arithmetic operation must be of type 'any', 'number', 'bigint' or an enum type Jan 2, 2020 at 13:05
  • 11
    @Sireini Depends on the types/formatting of the date properties, but if it's a standard "Date" object, then @Gal's response is fastest & no allocations. The a-b comment is actually very slow in Chrome (jsperf.com/date-sort-mm/1). If the dates are just ISO strings, it's fastest to just compare them a > b ? 1 : a < b ? -1 : 0.
    – MikeMurko
    May 17, 2020 at 14:11
  • 37
    If you are using TS and want to sort object by their date property, you can use the first option like this: return +b.date - +a.date; for descending order, and reversing the order of 'a' & 'b' for ascending order
    – Edwardcho
    Jun 24, 2020 at 13:52
365

@Phrogz answers are both great, but here is a great, more concise answer:

array.sort(function(a,b){return a.getTime() - b.getTime()});

Using the arrow function way

array.sort((a,b)=>a.getTime()-b.getTime());

found here: Sort date in Javascript

5
  • 53
    Doing the math directly a - b would also work. So, array.sort((a, b) => a - b) (es6)
    – yckart
    Feb 26, 2017 at 9:36
  • 3
    a.getTime() - b.getTime() is considerably faster then a - b
    – aRIEL
    Feb 15, 2022 at 6:20
  • concise, concise, if you only have defined dates...
    – serge
    May 23, 2022 at 8:16
  • 3
    To clarify, subtracting two Date objects is sufficient. The - operator calls valueOf method of the object for subtraction; and Date.valueOf returns the same value as Date.getTime.
    – Salman A
    Jun 30, 2022 at 7:28
  • 16
    TypeScript throws an error on the simple "a - b" solution, but it works well with the getTime approach.
    – Kepi
    Aug 9, 2022 at 12:58
127

After correcting the JSON this should work for you now:

var array = [{id: 1, date:'Mar 12 2012 10:00:00 AM'}, {id: 2, date:'Mar 8 2012 08:00:00 AM'}];


array.sort(function(a, b) {
    var c = new Date(a.date);
    var d = new Date(b.date);
    return c-d;
});
81

Above answers are all good 😊, here is my implementation of sorting date in ES6 way, I'm using Date.parse (is global Date object) this will convert string representation of Date to number of milliseconds. Instead of instantiating new Date object every time.

var array = ["2021-08-10T07:24:30.087+0000" , "2021-09-30T07:24:30.087+0000", "2021-10-13T07:24:30.087+0000"];

// sorting with latest date
array.sort((a,b) => Date.parse(b) - Date.parse(a))
4
  • 1
    The answer snippet doesn't fit for the question. you can update your answer to match the question or delete it.
    – SAMUEL
    Nov 11, 2021 at 13:28
  • 4
    This sorts a regular array of dates, not an array of objects with date properties, which was what the question was about.
    – Coreus
    Nov 3, 2022 at 14:54
  • this is the only answer that works with TypeScript for me (also see the answer here: stackoverflow.com/a/54634547/827129)
    – fredrivett
    Nov 30, 2022 at 9:41
  • Just a warning that this doesn't seem to work with UK dates (in the format dd/mm/yyyy). e.g. Date.parse("23/05/2023") = NaN Sep 21, 2023 at 13:21
65

Your data needs some corrections:

var array = [{id: 1, date: "Mar 12 2012 10:00:00 AM"},{id: 2, date: "Mar 28 2012 08:00:00 AM"}];

After correcting the data, you can use this piece of code:

function sortFunction(a,b){  
    var dateA = new Date(a.date).getTime();
    var dateB = new Date(b.date).getTime();
    return dateA > dateB ? 1 : -1;  
}; 

var array = [{id: 1, date: "Mar 12 2012 10:00:00 AM"},{id: 2, date: "Mar 28 2012 08:00:00 AM"}];
array.sort(sortFunction);​
4
  • 8
  • 9
    For anyone using Typescript, I was able to sort by date using this function, while the other ones using the date subtraction failed.
    – Danchat
    Jan 14, 2020 at 17:23
  • What is the differance? I see different types of quotes and a space, but that shouldn't matter, or am I missing something?
    – quick007
    Dec 20, 2021 at 4:33
  • This is a TERRIBLE answer. In Firefox you will end up getting a list sorted even if all of the values are null. You need to handle the case of zero, otherwise the sort is not guaranteed to be stable.
    – Gigabit
    Mar 12 at 22:47
30

I recommend GitHub: Array sortBy - a best implementation of sortBy method which uses the Schwartzian transform

But for now we are going to try this approach Gist: sortBy-old.js.
Let's create a method to sort arrays being able to arrange objects by some property.

Creating the sorting function

var sortBy = (function () {
  var toString = Object.prototype.toString,
      // default parser function
      parse = function (x) { return x; },
      // gets the item to be sorted
      getItem = function (x) {
        var isObject = x != null && typeof x === "object";
        var isProp = isObject && this.prop in x;
        return this.parser(isProp ? x[this.prop] : x);
      };
      
  /**
   * Sorts an array of elements.
   *
   * @param {Array} array: the collection to sort
   * @param {Object} cfg: the configuration options
   * @property {String}   cfg.prop: property name (if it is an Array of objects)
   * @property {Boolean}  cfg.desc: determines whether the sort is descending
   * @property {Function} cfg.parser: function to parse the items to expected type
   * @return {Array}
   */
  return function sortby (array, cfg) {
    if (!(array instanceof Array && array.length)) return [];
    if (toString.call(cfg) !== "[object Object]") cfg = {};
    if (typeof cfg.parser !== "function") cfg.parser = parse;
    cfg.desc = !!cfg.desc ? -1 : 1;
    return array.sort(function (a, b) {
      a = getItem.call(cfg, a);
      b = getItem.call(cfg, b);
      return cfg.desc * (a < b ? -1 : +(a > b));
    });
  };
  
}());

Setting unsorted data

var data = [
  {date: "2011-11-14T17:25:45Z", quantity: 2, total: 200, tip: 0,   type: "cash"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T16:28:54Z", quantity: 1, total: 300, tip: 200, type: "visa"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T16:30:43Z", quantity: 2, total: 90,  tip: 0,   type: "tab"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T17:22:59Z", quantity: 2, total: 90,  tip: 0,   type: "tab"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T16:53:41Z", quantity: 2, total: 90,  tip: 0,   type: "tab"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T16:48:46Z", quantity: 2, total: 90,  tip: 0,   type: "tab"},
  {date: "2011-11-31T17:29:52Z", quantity: 1, total: 200, tip: 100, type: "visa"},
  {date: "2011-11-01T16:17:54Z", quantity: 2, total: 190, tip: 100, type: "tab"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T16:58:03Z", quantity: 2, total: 90,  tip: 0,   type: "tab"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T16:20:19Z", quantity: 2, total: 190, tip: 100, type: "tab"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T17:07:21Z", quantity: 2, total: 90,  tip: 0,   type: "tab"},
  {date: "2011-11-14T16:54:06Z", quantity: 1, total: 100, tip: 0,   type: "cash"}
];

Using it

Finally, we arrange the array, by "date" property as string

//sort the object by a property (ascending)
//sorting takes into account uppercase and lowercase
sortBy(data, { prop: "date" });

If you want to ignore letter case, set the "parser" callback:

//sort the object by a property (descending)
//sorting ignores uppercase and lowercase
sortBy(data, {
    prop: "date",
    desc: true,
    parser: function (item) {
        //ignore case sensitive
        return item.toUpperCase();
    }
});

If you want to treat the "date" field as Date type:

//sort the object by a property (ascending)
//sorting parses each item to Date type
sortBy(data, {
    prop: "date",
    parser: function (item) {
        return new Date(item);
    }
});

Here you can play with the above example:
jsbin.com/lesebi

1
  • 1
    IE11 had an issue with the line: if (toString.call(cfg) !== "[object Object]") cfg = {}; If you replace it with if (Object.prototype.toString.call(cfg) !== "[object Object]") cfg = {}; you will be all good with IE11 as well.
    – skribbz14
    Jun 20, 2018 at 21:53
21

This should do when your date is in this format (dd/mm/yyyy).

  sortByDate(arr) {
    arr.sort(function(a,b){
      return Number(new Date(a.readableDate)) - Number(new Date(b.readableDate));
    });

    return arr;
  }

Then call sortByDate(myArr);

0
20

arr is an array of object and each object has date_prop which is a date. You can sort it in descending/decreasing order like this

 arr = arr.sort(function (a, b) {
      var dateA = new Date(a.date_prop).getTime();
      var dateB = new Date(b.date_prop).getTime();
      return dateA < dateB ? 1 : -1; // ? -1 : 1 for ascending/increasing order
    });
2
  • 3
    You have to return 0 if dates are same
    – Salman A
    May 10, 2022 at 20:59
  • That return with 0 is more production-ready :) return dateA === dateB ? 0 : dateA - dateB; Dec 4, 2023 at 13:46
15

You could use sortBy in underscore js.

http://underscorejs.org/#sortBy

Sample:

var log = [{date: '2016-01-16T05:23:38+00:00', other: 'sample'}, 
           {date: '2016-01-13T05:23:38+00:00',other: 'sample'}, 
           {date: '2016-01-15T11:23:38+00:00', other: 'sample'}];

console.log(_.sortBy(log, 'date'));
0
15

With ES6 arrow functions, you can further write just one line of concise code (excluding variable declaration).

Eg.:

var isDescending = true; //set to false for ascending
console.log(["8/2/2020","8/1/2020","8/13/2020", "8/2/2020"].sort((a,b) => isDescending ? new Date(b).getTime() - new Date(a).getTime() : new Date(a).getTime() - new Date(b).getTime()));

Since time does not exists with the above dates, the Date object will consider following default time for sorting:

00:00:00

The code will work for both ascending and descending sort. Just change the value of isDescending variable as required.

14

Strings with dates are comparable in JavaScript (if they are syntactically the same), e.g.:

'2020-12-01' < '2020-12-02' == true

This means you can use this expression in a custom sort function:

var arr = [{id:1, date:'2020-12-01'}, {id:1, date:'2020-12-15'}, {id:1, date:'2020-12-12'}]

function sortByDate(a, b) {
    if (a.date < b.date) {
        return 1;
    }
    if (a.date > b.date) {
        return -1;
    }
    return 0;
}

const sorted = arr.sort(sortByDate);
console.log(sorted);

0
13

Simple one line solution for me to sort dates :

sort((a, b) => (a < b ? 1 : -1))
2
  • sort is a tri-state. It should return -1,0,1 and returning anything less than that will lead to odd behavior from sort algorithms.
    – Jason
    Feb 10, 2023 at 17:40
  • even for sorting dates ? This worked fine for me. Feb 11, 2023 at 17:02
9

I'm going to add this here, as some uses may not be able to work out how to invert this sorting method.

To sort by 'coming up', we can simply swap a & b, like so:

your_array.sort ( (a, b) => {
      return new Date(a.DateTime) - new Date(b.DateTime);
});

Notice that a is now on the left hand side, and b is on the right, :D!

9

i was able to achieve sorting using below lines:

array.sort(function(a, b)
{
   if (a.DueDate > b.DueDate) return 1;
   if (a.DueDate < b.DueDate) return -1;
})
0
8

I personally use following approach to sort dates.

let array = ["July 11, 1960", "February 1, 1974", "July 11, 1615", "October 18, 1851", "November 12, 1995"];

array.sort(function(date1, date2) {
   date1 = new Date(date1);
   date2 = new Date(date2);
   if (date1 > date2) return 1;
   if (date1 < date2) return -1;
})
6
Adding absolute will give better results

var datesArray =[
      {"some":"data1","date": "2018-06-30T13:40:31.493Z"},
      {"some":"data2","date": "2018-07-04T13:40:31.493Z"},
      {"some":"data3","date": "2018-06-27T13:40:54.394Z"}
   ]

var sortedJsObjects = datesArray.sort(function(a,b){ 
    return Math.abs(new Date(a.date) - new Date(b.date)) 
});
1
  • Where is the comparison with the current date?
    – RobG
    Aug 27, 2020 at 0:32
6

Here is the shortest way to solve your problem.

  var array = [{id: 1, date: 'Mar 12 2012 10:00:00 AM'}, {id: 2, date: 'Mar 8 2012 08:00:00 AM'}];

  var sortedArray = array.sort((a,b) => Date.parse(new Date(a.date)) - Date.parse(new Date(b.date)));
1
  • 2
    Will be more accurate if you parse only data not new date: Date.parse(a.date)
    – Hyzyr
    May 12, 2022 at 18:42
4

Thank you Ganesh Sanap. sorting items by date field from old to new. Use it

 myArray = [{transport: "Air",
             load: "Vatican Vaticano",
             created: "01/31/2020"},
            {transport: "Air",
             load: "Paris",
             created: "01/30/2020"}] 

        myAarray.sort(function(a, b) {
            var c = new Date(a.created);
            var d = new Date(b.created);
            return c-d;
        });
2
3
["12 Jan 2018" , "1 Dec 2018", "04 May 2018"].sort(function(a,b) {
    return new Date(a).getTime() - new Date(b).getTime()
})
2
  • 1
    Please briefly explain your answer and check the formatting of your code.
    – dthulke
    Oct 21, 2018 at 20:01
  • Will fail for old dates. Jan 6, 2019 at 20:08
3
var array = [
  {id: 1, date: new Date("Mar 12 2012 10:00:00 AM")},
  {id: 2, date: new Date("Mar 8 2012 08:00:00 AM")}
];

array.sort((a, b) => {
  return a.date - b.date;
});

console.log(array);

// Solution 2

const sortedAsc = array .sort(
  (objA, objB) => Number(objA.date) - Number(objB.date),
);
2

For anyone who is wanting to sort by date (UK format), I used the following:

//Sort by day, then month, then year
for(i=0;i<=2; i++){
    dataCourses.sort(function(a, b){

        a = a.lastAccessed.split("/");
        b = b.lastAccessed.split("/");

        return a[i]>b[i] ? -1 : a[i]<b[i] ? 1 : 0;
    }); 
}
2

I have just taken the Schwartzian transform depicted above and made as function. It takes an array, the sorting function and a boolean as input:

function schwartzianSort(array,f,asc){
    for (var i=array.length;i;){
      var o = array[--i];
      array[i] = [].concat(f.call(o,o,i),o);
    }
    array.sort(function(a,b){
      for (var i=0,len=a.length;i<len;++i){
        if (a[i]!=b[i]) return a[i]<b[i]?asc?-1:1:1;
      }
      return 0;
    });
    for (var i=array.length;i;){
      array[--i]=array[i][array[i].length-1];
    }
    return array;
  }

function schwartzianSort(array, f, asc) {
  for (var i = array.length; i;) {
    var o = array[--i];
    array[i] = [].concat(f.call(o, o, i), o);
  }
  array.sort(function(a, b) {
    for (var i = 0, len = a.length; i < len; ++i) {
      if (a[i] != b[i]) return a[i] < b[i] ? asc ? -1 : 1 : 1;
    }
    return 0;
  });
  for (var i = array.length; i;) {
    array[--i] = array[i][array[i].length - 1];
  }
  return array;
}

arr = []
arr.push({
  date: new Date(1494434112806)
})
arr.push({
  date: new Date(1494434118181)
})
arr.push({
  date: new Date(1494434127341)
})

console.log(JSON.stringify(arr));

arr = schwartzianSort(arr, function(o) {
  return o.date
}, false)
console.log("DESC", JSON.stringify(arr));

arr = schwartzianSort(arr, function(o) {
  return o.date
}, true)
console.log("ASC", JSON.stringify(arr));

0
2

If like me you have an array with dates formatted like YYYY[-MM[-DD]] where you'd like to order more specific dates before less specific ones, I came up with this handy function:

function sortByDateSpecificity(a, b) {
  const aLength = a.date.length
  const bLength = b.date.length
  const aDate = a.date + (aLength < 10 ? '-12-31'.slice(-10 + aLength) : '')
  const bDate = b.date + (bLength < 10 ? '-12-31'.slice(-10 + bLength) : '')
  return new Date(aDate) - new Date(bDate)
}
0

Date form YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ or YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss

  
let timeList = [

  {"date": "2023/08/07 09:15:42"},
  {"date": "2021/11/25 18:34:19"},
  {"date": "2007/05/14 07:56:30"},
  {"date": "2015/09/03 15:22:08"},
  {"date": "2010/03/22 12:47:53"}
 ]


  timeList.sort((a,b)=>new Date(a.date) - new Date(b.date))

  console.log(timeList)

-1

Thanks for those brilliant answers on top. I have thought a slightly complicated answer. Just for those who want to compare different answers.

const data = [
    '2-2018', '1-2018',
    '3-2018', '4-2018',
    '1-2019', '2-2019',
    '3-2019', '4-2019',
    '1-2020', '3-2020',
    '4-2020', '1-2021'
]

let eachYearUniqueMonth = data.reduce((acc, elem) => {
    const uniqueDate = Number(elem.match(/(\d+)\-(\d+)/)[1])
    const uniqueYear = Number(elem.match(/(\d+)\-(\d+)/)[2])


    if (acc[uniqueYear] === undefined) {
        acc[uniqueYear] = []        
    } else{    
       if (acc[uniqueYear]  && !acc[uniqueYear].includes(uniqueDate)) {
          acc[uniqueYear].push(uniqueDate)
      }
    }

    return acc;
}, {})


let group = Object.keys(eachYearUniqueMonth).reduce((acc,uniqueYear)=>{
    eachYearUniqueMonth[uniqueYear].forEach(uniqueMonth=>{
    acc.push(`${uniqueYear}-${uniqueMonth}`)
  })
  
  return acc;
},[])

console.log(group);   //["2018-1", "2018-3", "2018-4", "2019-2", "2019-3", "2019-4", "2020-3", "2020-4"]


1
  • way overkill, too complicated Aug 21, 2023 at 15:40

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