Time and date formatting: Difference between revisions

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|| Decimal fraction of a second
|| Decimal fraction of a second
|| Examples:
|| Examples:
                  (minimum 1 digit, arbitrary number of digits allowed)                     001 (i.e. 0.001s) or
(minimum 1 digit, arbitrary number of digits allowed)
                                                                                            100 (i.e. 0.100s) or
001 (i.e. 0.001s) or
                                                                                            999 (i.e. 0.999s) or
100 (i.e. 0.100s) or
                                                                                            999876543210 (i.e. 0.999876543210s)
999 (i.e. 0.999s) or
999876543210 (i.e. 0.999876543210s)
|-
|-
|| O
|| O

Revision as of 15:59, 13 February 2017

Time and Date Formatting

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Format Description Example
d Day of the month, 2 digits with leading zeros 01 to 31
D A short textual representation of the day of the week Mon to Sun
j Day of the month without leading zeros 1 to 31
l A full textual representation of the day of the week Sunday to Saturday
N ISO-8601 numeric representation of the day of the week 1 (for Monday) through 7 (for Sunday)
S English ordinal suffix for the day of the month, 2 characters. Works well with j st, nd, rd or th
w Numeric representation of the day of the week 0 (for Sunday) to 6 (for Saturday)
z The day of the year (starting from 0) 0 to 364 (365 in leap years)
W ISO-8601 week number of year, weeks starting on Monday 01 to 53
F A full textual representation of a month, such as January or March January to December
m Numeric representation of a month, with leading zeros 01 to 12
M A short textual representation of a month Jan to Dec
n Numeric representation of a month, without leading zeros 1 to 12
t Number of days in the given month 28 to 31
L Whether it's a leap year 1 if it is a leap year, 0 otherwise.
o ISO-8601 year number (identical to (Y), but if the ISO week number (W) belongs to the previous or next year, that year is used instead) Examples: 1998 or 2004
Y A full numeric representation of a year, 4 digits Examples: 1999 or 2003
y A two digit representation of a year Examples: 99 or 03
a Lowercase Ante meridiem and Post meridiem am or pm
A Uppercase Ante meridiem and Post meridiem AM or PM
g 12-hour format of an hour without leading zeros 1 to 12
G 24-hour format of an hour without leading zeros 0 to 23
h 12-hour format of an hour with leading zeros 01 to 12
H 24-hour format of an hour with leading zeros 00 to 23
i Minutes, with leading zeros 00 to 59
s Seconds, with leading zeros 00 to 59
u Decimal fraction of a second Examples:

(minimum 1 digit, arbitrary number of digits allowed) 001 (i.e. 0.001s) or 100 (i.e. 0.100s) or 999 (i.e. 0.999s) or 999876543210 (i.e. 0.999876543210s)

O Difference to Greenwich time (GMT) in hours and minutes Example: +1030
P Difference to Greenwich time (GMT) with colon between hours and minutes Example: -08:00
T Timezone abbreviation of the machine running the code Examples: EST, MDT, PDT ...
Z Timezone offset in seconds (negative if west of UTC, positive if east) -43200 to 50400 - c ISO 8601 date represented as the local time with an offset to UTC appended.

Notes: 1) If unspecified, the month / day defaults to the current month / day, the time defaults to midnight, while the timezone defaults to the browser's timezone. If a time is specified, it must include both hours and minutes. The "T" delimiter, seconds, milliseconds and timezone are optional. 2) The decimal fraction of a second, if specified, must contain at least 1 digit (there is no limit to the maximum number of digits allowed), and may be delimited by either a '.' or a ',' Refer to the examples on the right for the various levels of date-time granularity which are supported, or see http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime for more info.

Examples: 1991 or 1992-10 or 1993-09-20 or 1994-08-19T16:20+01:00 or 1995-07-18T17:21:28-02:00 or 1996-06-17T18:22:29.98765+03:00 or 1997-05-16T19:23:30,12345-0400 or 1998-04-15T20:24:31.2468Z or 1999-03-14T20:24:32Z or 2000-02-13T21:25:33 2001-01-12 22:26:34

C An ISO date string as implemented by the native Date object's

[Date.toISOString](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/toISOString) method. This outputs the numeric part with *UTC* hour and minute values, and indicates this by appending the `'Z'` timezone identifier.

1962-06-17T09:21:34.125Z
U Seconds since the Unix Epoch (January 1 1970 00:00:00 GMT) 1193432466 or -2138434463
MS Microsoft AJAX serialized dates \/Date(1238606590509)\/ (i.e. UTC milliseconds since epoch) or \/Date(1238606590509+0800)\/
time A javascript millisecond timestamp 1350024476440
timestamp A UNIX timestamp (same as U) 1350024866