14

For example, using a date and time control, the user selects a date and time, such that the string representation is the following:

"6-25-2012 12:00:00 PM"

It so happens that this user is in the EST time zone. The string is passed to the server, which translates it into a .NET DateTime object, and then stores it in SQL Server in a datetime column.

When the date is returned later to the browser, it needs to be converted back into a date, however when the above string is fed into a date it is losing 4 hours of time. I believe this is because when not specifying a timezone while creating a JavaScript date, it defaults to local time, and since EST is -400 from GMT, it subtracts 4 hours from 12pm, even though that 12pm was meant to be specified as EST when the user selected it on a machine in the EST time zone.

Clearly something needs to be added to the original datetime string before its passed to the server to be persisted. What is the recommended way of doing this?

5
  • You might prefer to handle your date as a number of seconds d.getTime() / 1000 which can quite easily be converted back to date using most languages.
    – Serge
    Aug 12, 2013 at 7:29
  • Ok, but if the original date is constructed from string parts (two different controls, one from a date picker, the other at time picker), then once again how do I tell the JavaScript date that I construct what time zone its in, otherwise the d.getTime() / 1000 will be done against the time I give it, minus the 4 hours.
    – brushleaf
    Aug 12, 2013 at 7:35
  • Did you run test with different timezone to make sure the problem came from there and not from conversion?
    – Serge
    Aug 12, 2013 at 7:42
  • The date time in the database is stored as a date time and the representation in SQL when querying is exactly as I've shown it above in the example, meaning there is not translation issue. I can even see it in the browser debugger when it is returned to the client. but the moment its fed into a JavaScript date object, it loses 4 hours. It's because there's no timezone specified, so the question is, how do you specify a timezone for the date when its originally created?
    – brushleaf
    Aug 12, 2013 at 7:50

4 Answers 4

21

Don't rely on JavaScript's Date constructor to parse a string. The behavior and supported formats vary wildly per browser and locale. Here are just some of the default behaviors if you use the Date object directly.

If you must come from a string, try using a standardized format such as ISO8601. The date you gave in that format would be "2012-06-25T12:00:00". The easiest way to work with these in JavaScript is with moment.js.

Also, be careful about what you are actually meaning to represent. Right now, you are passing a local date/time, saving a local/date/time, and returning a local date/time. Along the way, the idea of what is "local" could change.

In many cases, the date/time is intended to represent an exact moment in time. To make that work, you need to convert from the local time entered to UTC on the client. Send UTC to your server, and store it. Later, retrieve UTC and send it back to your client, process it as UTC and convert back to local time. You can do all of this easily with moment.js:

// I'll assume these are the inputs you have.  Adjust accordingly.
var dateString = "6-25-2012";
var timeString = "12:00:00 PM";

// Construct a moment in the default local time zone, using a specific format.
var m = moment(dateString + " " + timeString, "M-D-YYYY h:mm:ss A");

// Get the value in UTC as an ISO8601 formatted string
var utc = m.toISOString(); // output: "2012-06-25T19:00:00.000Z"

On the server in .Net:

var dt = DateTime.Parse("2012-06-25T19:00:00.000Z",   // from the input variable
                        CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, // recommended for ISO
                        DateTimeStyles.RoundtripKind) // honor the Z for UTC kind

Store that in the database. Later retrieve it and send it back:

// when you pull it from your database, set it to UTC kind
var dt = DateTime.SpecifyKind((DateTime)reader["yourfield"], DateTimeKind.Utc);

// send it back in ISO format:
var s = dt.ToString("o"); // "o" is the ISO8601 "round-trip" pattern.

Pass it back to the javascript in moment.js:

// construct a moment:
var m = moment("2012-06-25T19:00:00.000Z"); // use the value from the server

// display it in this user's local time zone, in whatever format you want
var s = m.format("LLL");   // "June 25 2012 12:00 PM"

// or if you need a Date object
var dt = m.toDate();

See - that was easy, and you didn't need to get into anything fancy with time zones.

3
  • To store that ISO string in the database, doesn't the column have to be a datetimeoffset field (vs. a datetime SQL field)? Assuming of course we're not storing just a string. Or is it preferable to just store the string?
    – brushleaf
    Aug 13, 2013 at 0:45
  • No, don't store a string. If you are storing UTC, you can use either datetime or datetime2. You don't need a datetimeoffset for this particular scenario. You could use it, but you probably don't need to unless you care about the users local time zone. See my answer on DateTime vs DateTimeOffset. Aug 13, 2013 at 3:04
  • Just to add to my previous comment - many people do actually prefer to use DateTimeOffset for UTC. Even though they know the offset is always zero, tracking that in a DateTimeOffset instead of a DateTime is a good way to prevent it from accidently being interpreted incorrectly. The only downside to this is that it will be serialized with +00:00 instead of Z, but that's often acceptable. Feb 23, 2017 at 17:34
3

Here, I think this is what you are looking for: How to ignore user's time zone and force Date() use specific time zone

It seems to me that you can do something like this:

var date = new Date("6-25-2012 12:00:00 PM");

var offset = date.getTimezoneOffset(); // returns offset from GMT in minutes

// to convert the minutes to milliseconds
offset *= 60000;

// the js primitive value is unix time in milliseconds so this retrieves the 
// unix time in milliseconds and adds our offset.
// Now we can put this all back in a date object
date = new Date(date.valueOf() + offset);

// to get back your sting you can maybe now do something like this:
var dateString = date.toLocaleString().replace(/\//g,'-').replace(',','');
3

Blame the JSON.Stringfy()... and do:

x = (your_date);
x.setHours(x.getHours() - x.getTimezoneOffset() / 60);
3
  • This is the best hack I've ever seen to keep the date string tz haha. But it the time zone is not present in the string it'll not work, example: "2020-12-23T22:02:30" Jan 29, 2021 at 14:32
  • good answer - I had to use the '+' symbol instead
    – IonicMan
    Jan 17, 2023 at 16:33
  • @IonicMan I am in a minus 3 hours country, so I use "-" :-)
    – NaN
    Feb 5, 2023 at 21:21
0

I am using a filter before sending the date to the server:

vm.dateFormat = 'yyyy-MM-dd';
dateToSendToServer = $filter('date')(dateFromTheJavaScript, vm.dateFormat);

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