Time and date formatting

From Edge Threat Management Wiki - Arista
Jump to navigationJump to search

Time and Date Formatting

}
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)    Examples: 1998 or 2004
*                  belongs to the previous or next year, that year is used instead)
*        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:                                                                    Examples:
*                  1) If unspecified, the month / day defaults to the current month / day,   1991 or
*                     the time defaults to midnight, while the timezone defaults to the      1992-10 or
*                     browser's timezone. If a time is specified, it must include both hours 1993-09-20 or
*                     and minutes. The "T" delimiter, seconds, milliseconds and timezone     1994-08-19T16:20+01:00 or
*                     are optional.                                                          1995-07-18T17:21:28-02:00 or
*                  2) The decimal fraction of a second, if specified, must contain at        1996-06-17T18:22:29.98765+03:00 or
*                     least 1 digit (there is no limit to the maximum number                 1997-05-16T19:23:30,12345-0400 or
*                     of digits allowed), and may be delimited by either a '.' or a ','      1998-04-15T20:24:31.2468Z or
*                  Refer to the examples on the right for the various levels of              1999-03-14T20:24:32Z or
*                  date-time granularity which are supported, or see                         2000-02-13T21:25:33
*                  http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime for more info.                         2001-01-12 22:26:34
*        C         An ISO date string as implemented by the native Date object's             1962-06-17T09:21:34.125Z
*                  [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.
*        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