const dt = new Date('2017-12-12'); console.log(format(dt, 'YYYY-MM-DD'));
The above code logs 2017-12-11 in the US, but 2017-12-12 in India.
I followed this github thread here and tried out things but am not getting the desired results.
My expectation is to print the same date irrespective of time zone
Why I need this : Consider a scenario involving birthdates. If i am giving some input date, it has to be displayed as same date in all regions irrespective of their timezones.
You will need to subtract the time zone offset of your local time zone from the Date
instance, before you pass it to format
from date-fns
. For example:
const dt = new Date('2017-12-12'); const dtDateOnly = new Date(dt.valueOf() + dt.getTimezoneOffset() * 60 * 1000); console.log(format(dtDateOnly, 'YYYY-MM-DD')); // Always "2017-12-12"
You want to handle only the date part of the Date
instance, because the time part does not make sense for birthdates. However, the Date
object does not offer any "date-only" mode. You can access both its date and time parts in the local time zone or UTC. The problem is, that format
from date-fns
prints the output always in the local time zone.
When you executed the constructor only with the date part:
const dt = new Date('2017-12-12');
The JavaScript engine actually assumed a string in the incomplete ISO 8601 format and perfomed this:
const dt = new Date('2017-12-12T00:00:00.000Z');
It may still look "harmless" to you, but the date
instance exposes the value not only in UTC, but also in the local time zone. If you construct the Date
instance on the East Coast of the US, you will see the following output:
> const dt = new Date('2017-12-12'); > dt.toISOString() '2017-12-12T00:00:00.000Z' > dt.toString() 'Tue Dec 11 2017 19:00:00 GMT-0500 (EST)' > d.toLocaleString() '12/11/2017 7:00:00 PM'
If you know, that format
from date-fns
reads date and time parts from the date
instance in the local time zone, you will need to make your date "looking like" the midnight in your local time zone and not in UTC, which you passed to the Date
constructor. Then you will see the year, month and date numbers preserved. It means, that you need to subtract the time zone offset of your local time zone for the specified day. Date.prototype.getTimezoneOffset
returns the offset, but with an inverted sign and in minutes.
const dt = new Date('2017-12-12'); // Tue Dec 11 2017 19:00:00 GMT-0500 (EST) const dtDateOnly = new Date(dt.valueOf() + dt.getTimezoneOffset() * 60 * 1000); // Tue Dec 12 2017 00:00:00 GMT-0500 (EST) console.log(format(dtDateOnly, 'YYYY-MM-DD')); // Prints always "2017-12-12", regardless the time zone it executed in
However, such Date
instance can be used only to format the date-only value. You cannot use it for computing date differences, for example, which would need the original and correct UTC value.
If you need always the same date-only format and not the format specific to the current locale, you do not need date-fns
. You can format the string by the concatenation of padded numbers:
const dt = new Date('2017-12-12'); const year = dt.getUTCFullYear() const month = dt.getUTCMonth() + 1 // Date provides month index; not month number const day = dt.getUTCDate() // Print always "2017-12-12", regardless the time zone it executed in console.log(year + '-' + padToTwo(month) + '-', padToTwo(day)); // Or use a template literal console.log(`${year}-${padToTwo(month)}-${padToTwo(day)}`); function padToTwo (number) { return number > 9 ? number : '0' + number }
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