I want to compare date from MongoDB and my date.
Also i read this and this post and I did not find an answer.
My Code :
today: function() { var today = moment().format(); return Posts.find({createdAt : { $gte : today}}) // show posts created in "future" , so this function must return nothing }, createdAt = moment().format();// in MongoDB
As a result this construction doesn't work, but if i compare lie this :
var today = moment().format(); var daystart = moment().startOf('day').format(); if (daystart > today){ console.log ("YES"); } else if (daystart < today)console.log ("NO");
Return
"NO"
Anybody help ?
EDIT :
today: function() { var today = moment().toDate(); var daystart = moment().startOf('day').toDate(); // console.log(today + daystart); return Posts.find({createdAt : { $gt : today}}) }, week: function() { var today = new Date(); return Posts.find({createdAt : { $lt : today}}) }, month: function() { var today = new Date(); return Posts.find({createdAt : { $ne : today}}) } createdAt = new Date();
The .format()
method is a display helper function which returns the date string representation based on the passed token argument. To compare the date from MongoDB with the the current date and time, just call moment()
with no parameters, without the .format()
method and get the native Date object that Moment.js wraps by calling the toDate()
method:
today: function() { var now = moment().toDate(); return Posts.find({createdAt : { $gte : now }}); }
Convert date to MongoDB ISODate format in JavaScript using Moment JS
MongoDB uses ISODate as their primary date type. If you want to insert a date object into a MongoDB collection, you can use the Date() shell method.
You can specify a particular date by passing an ISO-8601 date string with a year within the inclusive range 0 through 9999 to the new Date() constructor or the ISODate() function. These functions accept the following formats:
"<YYYY-mm-dd>"
) returns the ISODate with the specified date."<YYYY-mm-ddTHH:MM:ss>"
) specifies the datetime in the client’s local timezone and returns the ISODate with the specified datetime in UTC."<YYYY-mm-ddTHH:MM:ssZ>"
) specifies the datetime in UTC and returns the ISODate with the specified datetime in UTC.If you are writing code in JavaScript and if you want to pass a JavaScript date object and use it with MongoDB client, the first thing you do is convert JavaScript date to MongoDB date format (ISODate). Here’s how you do it.
var today = moment(new Date()).format('YYYY-MM-DD[T00:00:00.000Z]'); console.log("Next day -- " + (reqDate.getDate() + 1)) var d = new Date(); d.setDate(reqDate.getDate() + 1); var tomorrow = moment(d).format('YYYY-MM-DD[T00:00:00.000Z]');
You can pass today and tomorrow object to MongoDB queries with new Date() shell method.
MongoClient.connect(con, function (err, db) { if (err) throw err db.collection('orders').find({ "order_id": store_id, "orderDate": { "$gte": new Date(today), "$lt": new Date(tomorrow)} }).toArray(function (err, result) { console.log(result); if (err) throw err res.send(result); }) })
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