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I am working with momentjs and converting dates to different time zones using convertedDate = moment().utcOffset(timezone).format(). This works well but it is a string and I need to transform it to date object.

I've tried new Date(convertedDate) and moment().utcOffset(timezone).toDate() but that returns my current timezone as a date object. How can I keep the converted timezone?

3 Answers 3

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So I wasn't very far off. The format needs to exclude timezone for it to work. This code finally worked how I needed it to.

convertedDate = new Date(moment().utcOffset('-4').format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm'));

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  • 3
    This is not a good approach. It relies on the Date object's parsing, and it's basically lying about the input being four hours off from local time. The Date object cannot represent another time zone. Aug 29, 2017 at 18:36
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A cleaner approach to get a native Date object with time according to the timezone, using moment would be following:

convertedDate = moment.utc(moment.tz(timezone).format('YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss')).toDate()

PS: assuming two things

  • you have imported both 'moment' and 'moment-timezone'.
  • value of timezone is given like 'Asia/Kolkata' instead of an offset value
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This should work:

I have the same issue. Just get the Date as a string using the same approach that you are using. Let's say your date is, for example: '2018-08-05T10:00:00'.

Now you need the Date object with correct time. To convert String into object without messing around with timezones, Use getTimezoneOffset:

var date = new Date('2016-08-25T00:00:00')
var userTimezoneOffset = date.getTimezoneOffset() * 60000;
new Date(date.getTime() - userTimezoneOffset);

getTimezoneOffset() will return either negative or positive value. This must be subtracted to work in every location in the world.

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