40

I have a ISO date string as below

 var startTimeISOString = "2013-03-10T02:00:00Z";

when I convert it to date object in javascript using below code, it returns

var startTimeDate = new Date(startTimeISOString);

output is

Date {Sun Mar 10 2013 07:30:00 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time)}

It sure converts the ISOString to date but it converts to local time since new Date() is client dependent. How to just convert iso date time string to date and time but not to local date-time..?

Thanks

2
  • 2
    Your ISO time ends with 'Z' which means UTC (GMT). If the time is in fact local to start with you should replace the 'Z' with '+0530'. But if you want to round trip your times you should keep the string version in UTC. Apr 11, 2014 at 15:58
  • can you clarify that you are attempting to create a string representation that preserves the original timezone, in this case Zulu (Z), rather than re-interpreting the time in the timezone of the computer running the code. It sounds like you are, but it's not 100% clear.
    – Ed Sykes
    Jul 10, 2015 at 8:00

6 Answers 6

64

According to MDN:

Differences in assumed time zone

Given a date string of "March 7, 2014", parse() assumes a local time zone, but given an ISO format such as "2014-03-07" it will assume a time zone of UTC. Therefore Date objects produced using those strings will represent different moments in time unless the system is set with a local time zone of UTC. This means that two date strings that appear equivalent may result in two different values depending on the format of the string that is being converted (this behavior is changed in ECMAScript ed 6 so that both will be treated as local).

I have done like this and am now getting the exact time which is inside the ISO date string instead of the local time

 var startTimeISOString = "2013-03-10T02:00:00Z";

 var startTime = new Date(startTimeISOString );
 startTime =   new Date( startTime.getTime() + ( startTime.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000 ) );

This will give the same date time inside iso date string , the output here is

o/p

Date {Sun Mar 10 2013 02:00:00 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time)}
6
  • i don't see that the details of the parse function has anything to do with this. The quoted MDN paragraph just states that parse looks at the format of the string and figures out whether the format is RFC2822 or ISO8601.
    – Ed Sykes
    Jul 10, 2015 at 8:05
  • The answer here gives the correct hour of the day, but it's dangerous because you're still in a different timezone to the original time. The correct answer would create a date object with the same timezone as the original.
    – Ed Sykes
    Jul 10, 2015 at 8:11
  • Note that getTimezoneOffset is the difference between UTC and local, yielding the opposite of what one might expect. From MDN: " Note that this means that the offset is positive if the local timezone is behind UTC and negative if it is ahead. For example, if your time zone is UTC+10 (Australian Eastern Standard Time), -600 will be returned. "
    – Ed Sykes
    Jul 10, 2015 at 8:19
  • I'm just reading the title of this question and this, the acceptance answer, doesn't answer the question - because it definitely doesn't assume the timezone of startTimeISOString.
    – Ed Sykes
    Jul 10, 2015 at 8:26
  • 1
    If you insist on using the built-in parser, all you need to do is remove the trailing Z: new Date(startTimeISOString.replace(/Z/,'')). Note that an "ISO string" is not necessarily Z, and by adjusting it by the host timezone offset it represents a different moment in time from the original where the host offset is not +0000.
    – RobG
    Aug 18, 2017 at 0:17
16

To sum up the conversation from tracevipin's post:

All Date objects are based on a time value that is milliseconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z so they are UTC at their core. This is different to UNIX, which uses a value that is represents seconds since the same epoch.

The Date.prototype.toString method returns an implementation dependent string that represents the time based on the system settings and timezone offset of the client (aka local time).

If a UTC ISO8601 time string is required, the Date.prototype.toISOString method can be used. It's quite easy to write a "shim" for this methods if required.

Lastly, do not trust Date.parse to parse a string. Support for an ISO8601 format UTC string is specified in ES5, however it's not consistently implemented across browsers in use. It is much better to parse the string manually (it's not hard, there are examples on SO of how to do it) if wide browser support is required (e.g. typical web application).

Simple ISO8601 UTC time stamp parser:

function dateObjectFromUTC(s) {
  s = s.split(/\D/);
  return new Date(Date.UTC(+s[0], --s[1], +s[2], +s[3], +s[4], +s[5], 0));
}

and here's a shim for toISOString:

if (typeof Date.prototype.toISOString != 'function') {

  Date.prototype.toISOString = (function() {
  
    function z(n){return (n<10? '0' : '') + n;}
    function p(n){
      n = n < 10? z(n) : n;
      return n < 100? z(n) : n;
    }
    
    return function() {
      return this.getUTCFullYear() + '-' +
             z(this.getUTCMonth() + 1) + '-' +
             z(this.getUTCDate()) + 'T' +
             z(this.getUTCHours()) + ':' +
             z(this.getUTCMinutes()) + ':' +
             z(this.getUTCSeconds()) + '.' +
             p(this.getUTCMilliseconds()) + 'Z';
    } 
  }());
}
4
  • You should change your regex to /[\-\.\+: TZ]/g Feb 23, 2014 at 22:57
  • @OnurYıldırım—you're right, it doesn't correctly split the string, the simplest RegExp to use is /\D/. It's not intended as a general ISO 8601 string parser, that is a very much bigger job.
    – RobG
    Feb 23, 2014 at 23:44
  • ISO strings and UTC are two different things. This will not produce an ISO 8601 string. ISO 8601 encodes the timezone, this won't (due to use of getUTC...)
    – Ed Sykes
    Jul 10, 2015 at 8:14
  • @EdSykes—I am well aware of that. There are many forms of ISO 8601 date and time strings that do not include a time zone, e.g. 2015-07, 2006-W52-5. This is a shim for ECMAScript's Date.prototype.toISOString, which is UTC, so this shim is also UTC.
    – RobG
    Jul 10, 2015 at 8:36
7

This happens because date is printed using toString method which by default returns the date and time in local timezone. The method toUTCString will give you the string you need.

Date actually keeps the date as unix time in milliseconds and provides methods to manipulate it.

5
  • can I have it as date object not a string? right now it returns a string, but I need it to be a date object since I am doing date comparisons with other date
    – CrazyNooB
    Mar 20, 2013 at 7:14
  • As the date object stores unix time you can use the UTC methods wherever needed. See the UTC methods in Date : developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/…
    – Diode
    Mar 20, 2013 at 7:16
  • getUTCDate, getUTCMonth etc.
    – Diode
    Mar 20, 2013 at 7:17
  • i get that, but can there be no direct conversion of iso date string to its correct date instead of local time in javascript..?
    – CrazyNooB
    Mar 20, 2013 at 7:20
  • when we give a an iso date string, a Date object is created with its equivalent unix time. So the Date object is independent of timezone. Then methods like getDate, getMonth , toString etc. returns values of local time and methods like getUTCDate, getUTCMonth, toUTCString returns UTC values. You cannot specify timezone. If you need that kind of functionality either you have build it on Date or use a library like momentjs.com or github.com/mde/timezone-js
    – Diode
    Mar 20, 2013 at 8:09
0

In vanilla javascript there isn't a way to create a date that assumes the local time of the ISO formatted string you give it. Here's what happens when you pass an ISO 8601 formatted string to javascript. I'm going to use a non UTC time as it illustrates the problem better than using an ISO formatted string:

  1. var startTime = new Date("2013-03-10T02:00:00+06:00"). Note this could also be 2013-03-10T02:00:00Z or any other ISO-formatted string.
  2. read the time, apply the offset and calculate milliseconds since 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z
  3. You now have only milliseconds - you have lost all timezone info. In this case 1362859200000

All functions, apart from the ones that give you a UTC representation of that number, will use the timezone of the computer running the code to interpret that number as a time.

To do what the original poster wants, you need to.

  1. parse the ISO string, interpret the offset ('Z' or '+06:00') as the timezone offset
  2. store the timezone offset
  3. calculate and store the ms since epoch, using the offset timezone offset
  4. hold that offset
  5. whenever attempting to make a calculation or print the date, apply the timezone offset.

This isn't trivial, and requires a complete interpretation of the 8601 spec. Way too much code to put here.

This is exactly what moment.js is designed to do. I strongly recommend using it. Using moment.js:

moment("2013-03-10T02:00:00Z").format()
"2013-03-10T02:00:00Z"

this will result in printing the ISO time of the original string, preserving the offset.

0

you can try moment js library https://momentjs.com

For my case, I had 2022-10-17T01:00:00 on my database. SO I need to format it to the 01:00:00 AM.

So here was my solution.

var date = "2022-10-17T01:00:00"
var timeFormat = moment(date ).format('HH:mm A');

output: 01:00:00 AM

-2

it will return ISOdate

var getDate = () => {
    var dt = new Date();
    var off = dt.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000
    var newdt = new Date(dt - off).toISOString()
    return newdt.slice(0, 19)
}

Output enter image description here

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.