11

Trying to migrate from Moment.js to Dayjs but the only thing I can't get working is the Timezone abbreviation.

dayjs('2020-07-06T14:30:00.000-04:00').tz(dayjs.tz.guess()).format('Do MMM YYYY [at] HH:MMa z')

Calling the above I would expect 6th Jul 2020 at 08:07am EDT but currently I am just getting z where EDT is.

I have added the utc and timezone plugins and can't see any other plugins needed to make this work, I notice on Dayjs format docs that z isn't listed but searching the web, I see a lot of folks saying the solution is format('', {timeZone}) but the format doesn't take a second argument??

Looks like it was added to tz-plugin: https://github.com/iamkun/dayjs/pull/325/files#diff-cad460a5e46a2a48c59e95356c683820R195

Here's a code sandbox with an example of the issue: https://codesandbox.io/s/hungry-knuth-r58gz

--- Edit

Looks like support for tz abbr was removed :( https://github.com/iamkun/dayjs/pull/448/commits/e64c03cea79c579bcd3c4caf235b4724e56614d4

1 Answer 1

29

The z formatting option is added in 1.9.0 version of dayjs: https://github.com/iamkun/dayjs/pull/1069

Update the newest version and set up the plugins correctly, which should work. Example below:

var dayjs = require("dayjs")
var utc = require("dayjs/plugin/utc")
var timezone = require("dayjs/plugin/timezone")
var advanced = requires("dayjs/plugin/advancedFormat")

dayjs.extend(timezone)
dayjs.extend(utc)
dayjs.extend(advanced)
dayjs().tz('Europe/Paris').format('DD/MM/YYYY z')
6
  • Oh nice they added support but opted to remove TZ name due to issues with confusion abbr. Using UTC everywhere now Oct 22, 2020 at 13:18
  • 4
    Been looking for this for hours! Thanks for the simple solution - had everything in there except the dayjs.extend(advanced) --> no mention of that in the docs, so thanks! Sep 7, 2021 at 21:51
  • 1
    When I do this I get '08/06/2023 GMT+2'. How do I get the three letter abbreviation instead of the GMT+n format? Jun 8 at 16:33
  • @JimmyTheCode exactly i am facing same problem. have you figured out the solution ?
    – Bilal Butt
    Jun 19 at 14:06
  • Hi @Bilal, I managed to convince our product team that we should stick to "GMT+1", instead of BST. The reason that dayjs has dropped the three letter abbreviation, is because it's known to cause confusion. For example, BST can mean "British Standard Time" in the UK, but in another locale it might mean "Bahraini Standard Time". There was a good, comprehensive StackOverflow answer on this, but I can't find it right now. Jul 11 at 7:31

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

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

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