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I'm using moment.js and I'm doing the following:

moment().startOf('isoWeek').day(0)

Instead of giving me the Sunday for this week - 25th, it returns the previous Sunday, 18th.

I have days from 0-6 saved in the database (1 = Monday, 0 = Sunday)

How can I use 0 to get this week's Sunday and not the previous Sunday?

Edit: Thanks for all the replies. I think I'll just add a week to the date for now but longer term will probably switch over to use date-fns across the project. Thanks.

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  • Why not moment().endOf('isoWeek')?
    – RobG
    Jul 23, 2021 at 11:18
  • @RobG: endOf('isoWeek') should indeed get you the correct Sunday, but returns 23:59:59.999 for time (which you may or may not want).
    – Joshua
    Jul 23, 2021 at 12:30

3 Answers 3

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While startOf('isoWeek') uses Monday as the first day of the week, .day(0) uses the ECMAScript definition and takes you back another day (because based on its definition the Sunday before the Monday belongs to the respective week).

To work around it and get the upcoming Sunday, add another week using moment's add function as described on https://momentjscom.readthedocs.io/en/latest/moment/03-manipulating/01-add/:

moment().startOf('isoWeek').day(0).add(1, 'weeks')

or use the shorthand as suggested on https://momentjscom.readthedocs.io/en/latest/moment/02-get-set/06-day/:

moment().startOf('isoWeek').day(7); 
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  • Good point @RobG, my original answer wording actually was a bit off. I edited it, thanks for the input!
    – Joshua
    Jul 23, 2021 at 12:27
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In moment.js the week starts on Sunday and ends on Saturday. This is a common format for calendars (although not one I prefer).

You can make it wrap around by setting the day to 8 instead of 0.


That said, the developers of Moment.js themselves say "We now generally consider Moment to be a legacy project in maintenance mode." and list a number of reasons why you might not want to use it.

A popular alternative is date-fns which would allow you to write code like this:

<script type=module>
import { nextSunday, formatISO, startOfWeek } from 'https://esm.run/date-fns';

const today = new Date();
const start = startOfWeek(today, { weekStartsOn: 1 }); // 1 is Monday
const sunday = nextSunday(today)
console.log(formatISO(sunday));
</script>

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You can add + 7 after 0 to have the "next" sunday. Like this :

const date = moment().startOf("isoWeek").day(0 + 7);
console.log("date", date);

In english, a week start with a Sunday. That's why your code send back to you the "previous" sunday. Because this week is already started.

But be careful, Moment.Js si now depreciated. I recommend you to use date.fns for your project.

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