Previous Contents Index Next |
Core JavaScript Reference 1.5 |
Lets you work with dates and times.
JavaScript 1.1: added prototype property.
JavaScript 1.3: removed platform dependencies to provide a uniform behavior across platforms; added ms_num parameter to Date constructor; added getFullYear, setFullYear, getMilliseconds, setMilliseconds, toSource, and UTC methods (such as getUTCDate and setUTCDate).
Created by
The Date constructor:
new Date()
new Date(milliseconds)
new Date(dateString)
new Date(yr_num, mo_num, day_num
[, hr_num, min_num, sec_num, ms_num])
Versions prior to JavaScript 1.3:
new Date()
new Date(milliseconds)
new Date(dateString)
new Date(yr_num, mo_num, day_num[, hr_num, min_num, sec_num])
Parameters
milliseconds
Integer value representing the number of milliseconds since 1 January 1970 00:00:00. dateString
String value representing a date. The string should be in a format recognized by the Date.parse method. yr_num, mo_num,
day_num
Integer values representing part of a date. As an integer value, the month is represented by 0 to 11 with 0=January and 11=December. hr_num, min_num,
sec_num, ms_num
Description
If you supply no arguments, the constructor creates a Date object for today's date and time according to local time. If you supply some arguments but not others, the missing arguments are set to 0. If you supply any arguments, you must supply at least the year, month, and day. You can omit the hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds.
The date is measured in milliseconds since midnight 01 January, 1970 UTC. A day holds 86,400,000 milliseconds. The Date object range is -100,000,000 days to 100,000,000 days relative to 01 January, 1970 UTC.
The Date object provides uniform behavior across platforms.
The Date object supports a number of UTC (universal) methods, as well as local time methods. UTC, also known as Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), refers to the time as set by the World Time Standard. The local time is the time known to the computer where JavaScript is executed.
For compatibility with millennium calculations (in other words, to take into account the year 2000), you should always specify the year in full; for example, use 1998, not 98. To assist you in specifying the complete year, JavaScript includes the methods getFullYear, setFullYear, getFullUTCYear, and setFullUTCYear.
The following example returns the time elapsed between timeA and timeB in milliseconds.
timeA = new Date();
// Statements here to take some action.
timeB = new Date();
timeDifference = timeB - timeA;
JavaScript 1.2 and earlier. The Date object behaves as follows:
Dates prior to 1970 are not allowed.
JavaScript depends on platform-specific date facilities and behavior; the behavior of the Date object varies from platform to platform.
Property Summary
Property
Description constructor
prototype
Method Summary
Method
Description getDate
Returns the day of the month for the specified date according to local time. getDay
Returns the day of the week for the specified date according to local time.
Returns the year of the specified date according to local time. getHours
Returns the hour in the specified date according to local time.
Returns the milliseconds in the specified date according to local time. getMinutes
Returns the minutes in the specified date according to local time. getMonth
Returns the month in the specified date according to local time. getSeconds
Returns the seconds in the specified date according to local time. getTime
Returns the numeric value corresponding to the time for the specified date according to local time. getTimezoneOffset
Returns the time-zone offset in minutes for the current locale.
Returns the day (date) of the month in the specified date according to universal time.
Returns the day of the week in the specified date according to universal time.
Returns the year in the specified date according to universal time.
Returns the hours in the specified date according to universal time.
Returns the milliseconds in the specified date according to universal time.
Returns the minutes in the specified date according to universal time.
Returns the month according in the specified date according to universal time.
Returns the seconds in the specified date according to universal time. getYear
Returns the year in the specified date according to local time. parse
Returns the number of milliseconds in a date string since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00, local time. setDate
Sets the day of the month for a specified date according to local time.
Sets the full year for a specified date according to local time. setHours
Sets the hours for a specified date according to local time.
Sets the milliseconds for a specified date according to local time. setMinutes
Sets the minutes for a specified date according to local time. setMonth
Sets the month for a specified date according to local time.
Sets the seconds for a specified date according to local time.
Sets the day of the month for a specified date according to universal time.
Sets the full year for a specified date according to universal time.
Sets the hour for a specified date according to universal time.
Sets the milliseconds for a specified date according to universal time.
Sets the minutes for a specified date according to universal time.
Sets the month for a specified date according to universal time.
Sets the seconds for a specified date according to universal time. setYear
toGMTString
Converts a date to a string, using the Internet GMT conventions. toLocaleString
Converts a date to a string, using the current locale's conventions. toSource
Returns an object literal representing the specified Date object; you can use this value to create a new object. Overrides the Object.toSource method. toString
Returns a string representing the specified Date object. Overrides the Object.toString method.
Converts a date to a string, using the universal time convention. UTC
Returns the number of milliseconds in a Date object since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00, universal time. valueOf
Returns the primitive value of a Date object. Overrides the Object.valueOf method.
In addition, this object inherits the watch and unwatch methods from Object.
Examples
The following examples show several ways to assign dates:
today = new Date()
birthday = new Date("December 17, 1995 03:24:00")
birthday = new Date(95,11,17)
birthday = new Date(95,11,17,3,24,0)
Specifies the function that creates an object's prototype. Note that the value of this property is a reference to the function itself, not a string containing the function's name.
Description
See Object.constructor.
Returns the day of the month for the specified date according to local time.
Description
The value returned by getDate is an integer between 1 and 31.
Examples
The second statement below assigns the value 25 to the variable day, based on the value of the Date object Xmas95.
Xmas95 = new Date("December 25, 1995 23:15:00")
day = Xmas95.getDate()
See also
Date.getUTCDate, Date.getUTCDay, Date.setDate
Returns the day of the week for the specified date according to local time.
Description
The value returned by getDay is an integer corresponding to the day of the week: 0 for Sunday, 1 for Monday, 2 for Tuesday, and so on.
Examples
The second statement below assigns the value 1 to weekday, based on the value of the Date object Xmas95. December 25, 1995, is a Monday.
Xmas95 = new Date("December 25, 1995 23:15:00")
weekday = Xmas95.getDay()
See also
Date.getUTCDay, Date.setDate
Returns the year of the specified date according to local time.
Description
The value returned by getFullYear is an absolute number. For dates between the years 1000 and 9999, getFullYear returns a four-digit number, for example, 1995. Use this function to make sure a year is compliant with years after 2000.
Use this method instead of the getYear method.
Examples
The following example assigns the four-digit value of the current year to the variable yr.
var yr;
Today = new Date();
yr = Today.getFullYear();
See also
Date.getYear, Date.getUTCFullYear, Date.setFullYear
Returns the hour for the specified date according to local time.
Description
The value returned by getHours is an integer between 0 and 23.
Examples
The second statement below assigns the value 23 to the variable hours, based on the value of the Date object Xmas95.
Xmas95 = new Date("December 25, 1995 23:15:00")
hours = Xmas95.getHours()
See also
Date.getUTCHours, Date.setHours
Returns the milliseconds in the specified date according to local time.
Description
The value returned by getMilliseconds is a number between 0 and 999.
Examples
The following example assigns the milliseconds portion of the current time to the variable ms.
var ms;
Today = new Date();
ms = Today.getMilliseconds();
See also
Date.getUTCMilliseconds, Date.setMilliseconds
Returns the minutes in the specified date according to local time.
Description
The value returned by getMinutes is an integer between 0 and 59.
Examples
The second statement below assigns the value 15 to the variable minutes, based on the value of the Date object Xmas95.
Xmas95 = new Date("December 25, 1995 23:15:00")
minutes = Xmas95.getMinutes()
See also
Date.getUTCMinutes, Date.setMinutes
Returns the month in the specified date according to local time.
Description
The value returned by getMonth is an integer between 0 and 11. 0 corresponds to January, 1 to February, and so on.
Examples
The second statement below assigns the value 11 to the variable month, based on the value of the Date object Xmas95.
Xmas95 = new Date("December 25, 1995 23:15:00")
month = Xmas95.getMonth()
See also
Date.getUTCMonth, Date.setMonth
Returns the seconds in the current time according to local time.
Description
The value returned by getSeconds is an integer between 0 and 59.
Examples
The second statement below assigns the value 30 to the variable secs, based on the value of the Date object Xmas95.
Xmas95 = new Date("December 25, 1995 23:15:30")
secs = Xmas95.getSeconds()
See also
Date.getUTCSeconds, Date.setSeconds
Returns the numeric value corresponding to the time for the specified date according to local time.
Description
The value returned by the getTime method is the number of milliseconds since 1 January 1970 00:00:00. You can use this method to help assign a date and time to another Date object.
Examples
The following example assigns the date value of theBigDay to sameAsBigDay:
theBigDay = new Date("July 1, 1999")
sameAsBigDay = new Date()
sameAsBigDay.setTime(theBigDay.getTime())
See also
Date.getUTCHours, Date.setTime
Returns the time-zone offset in minutes for the current locale.
Description
The time-zone offset is the difference between local time and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). Daylight savings time prevents this value from being a constant.
Examples
x = new Date()
currentTimeZoneOffsetInHours = x.getTimezoneOffset()/60
Returns the day (date) of the month in the specified date according to universal time.
Description
The value returned by getUTCDate is an integer between 1 and 31.
Examples
The following example assigns the day portion of the current date to the variable d.
var d;
Today = new Date();
d = Today.getUTCDate();
See also
Date.getDate, Date.getUTCDay, Date.setUTCDate
Returns the day of the week in the specified date according to universal time.
Description
The value returned by getUTCDay is an integer corresponding to the day of the week: 0 for Sunday, 1 for Monday, 2 for Tuesday, and so on.
Examples
The following example assigns the weekday portion of the current date to the variable ms.
var weekday;
Today = new Date()
weekday = Today.getUTCDay()
See also
Date.getDay, Date.getUTCDate, Date.setUTCDate
Returns the year in the specified date according to universal time.
Description
The value returned by getUTCFullYear is an absolute number that is compliant with year-2000, for example, 1995.
Examples
The following example assigns the four-digit value of the current year to the variable yr.
var yr;
Today = new Date();
yr = Today.getUTCFullYear();
See also
Date.getFullYear, Date.setFullYear
Returns the hours in the specified date according to universal time.
Description
The value returned by getUTCHours is an integer between 0 and 23.
Examples
The following example assigns the hours portion of the current time to the variable hrs.
var hrs;
Today = new Date();
hrs = Today.getUTCHours();
See also
Date.getHours, Date.setUTCHours
Returns the milliseconds in the specified date according to universal time.
Description
The value returned by getUTCMilliseconds is an integer between 0 and 999.
Examples
The following example assigns the milliseconds portion of the current time to the variable ms.
var ms;
Today = new Date();
ms = Today.getUTCMilliseconds();
See also
Date.getMilliseconds, Date.setUTCMilliseconds
Returns the minutes in the specified date according to universal time.
Description
The value returned by getUTCMinutes is an integer between 0 and 59.
Examples
The following example assigns the minutes portion of the current time to the variable min.
var min;
Today = new Date();
min = Today.getUTCMinutes();
See also
Date.getMinutes, Date.setUTCMinutes
Returns the month according in the specified date according to universal time.
Description
The value returned by getUTCMonth is an integer between 0 and 11 corresponding to the month. 0 for January, 1 for February, 2 for March, and so on.
Examples
The following example assigns the month portion of the current date to the variable mon.
var mon;
Today = new Date();
mon = Today.getUTCMonth();
See also
Date.getMonth, Date.setUTCMonth
Returns the seconds in the specified date according to universal time.
Description
The value returned by getUTCSeconds is an integer between 0 and 59.
Examples
The following example assigns the seconds portion of the current time to the variable sec.
var sec;
Today = new Date();
sec = Today.getUTCSeconds();
See also
Date.getSeconds, Date.setUTCSeconds
Returns the year in the specified date according to local time.
JavaScript 1.3: deprecated; also, getYear returns the year minus 1900 regardless of the year specified
Description
getYear is no longer used and has been replaced by the getFullYear method.
The getYear method returns the year minus 1900; thus:
For years above 2000, the value returned by getYear is 100 or greater. For example, if the year is 2026, getYear returns 126.
For years between and including 1900 and 1999, the value returned by getYear is between 0 and 99. For example, if the year is 1976, getYear returns 76.
For years less than 1900 or greater than 1999, the value returned by getYear is less than 0. For example, if the year is 1800, getYear returns -100. To take into account years before and after 2000, you should use Date.getFullYear instead of getYear so that the year is specified in full.
JavaScript 1.2 and earlier versions. The getYear method returns either a 2-digit or 4-digit year:
For years between and including 1900 and 1999, the value returned by getYear is the year minus 1900. For example, if the year is 1976, the value returned is 76.
For years less than 1900 or greater than 1999, the value returned by getYear is the four-digit year. For example, if the year is 1856, the value returned is 1856. If the year is 2026, the value returned is 2026.
Examples
Example 1. The second statement assigns the value 95 to the variable year.
Xmas = new Date("December 25, 1995 23:15:00")
year = Xmas.getYear() // returns 95
Example 2. The second statement assigns the value 100 to the variable year.
Xmas = new Date("December 25, 2000 23:15:00")
year = Xmas.getYear() // returns 100
Example 3. The second statement assigns the value -100 to the variable year.
Xmas = new Date("December 25, 1800 23:15:00")
year = Xmas.getYear() // returns -100
Example 4. The second statement assigns the value 95 to the variable year, representing the year 1995.
Xmas.setYear(95)
year = Xmas.getYear() // returns 95
See also
Date.getFullYear, Date.getUTCFullYear, Date.setYear
Returns the number of milliseconds in a date string since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00, local time.
Description
The parse method takes a date string (such as "Dec 25, 1995") and returns the number of milliseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 (local time). This function is useful for setting date values based on string values, for example in conjunction with the setTime method and the Date object.
Given a string representing a time, parse returns the time value. It accepts the IETF standard date syntax: "Mon, 25 Dec 1995 13:30:00 GMT". It understands the continental US time-zone abbreviations, but for general use, use a time-zone offset, for example, "Mon, 25 Dec 1995 13:30:00 GMT+0430" (4 hours, 30 minutes west of the Greenwich meridian). If you do not specify a time zone, the local time zone is assumed. GMT and UTC are considered equivalent.
Because parse is a static method of Date, you always use it as Date.parse(), rather than as a method of a Date object you created.
Examples
If IPOdate is an existing Date object, then you can set it to August 9, 1995 as follows:
IPOdate.setTime(Date.parse("Aug 9, 1995"))
See also
Date.UTC
Represents the prototype for this class. You can use the prototype to add properties or methods to all instances of a class. For information on prototypes, see Function.prototype.
Sets the day of the month for a specified date according to local time.
Examples
The second statement below changes the day for theBigDay to July 24 from its original value.
theBigDay = new Date("July 27, 1962 23:30:00")
theBigDay.setDate(24)
See also
Date.getDate, Date.setUTCDate
Sets the full year for a specified date according to local time.
Syntax
setFullYear(yearValue[, monthValue, dayValue])
Parameters
Description
If you do not specify the monthValue and dayValue parameters, the values returned from the getMonth and getDate methods are used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setFullYear attempts to update the other parameters and the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you specify 15 for monthValue, the year is incremented by 1 (year + 1), and 3 is used for the month.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setFullYear(1997);
See also
Date.getUTCFullYear,Date.setUTCFullYear, Date.setYear
Sets the hours for a specified date according to local time.
JavaScript 1.3: Added minutesValue, secondsValue, and msValue parameters.
Syntax
setHours(hoursValue[, minutesValue, secondsValue, msValue])
Versions prior to JavaScript 1.3:
Parameters
Description
If you do not specify the minutesValue, secondsValue, and msValue parameters, the values returned from the getUTCMinutes, getUTCSeconds, and getMilliseconds methods are used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setHours attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 100 for secondsValue, the minutes will be incremented by 1 (min + 1), and 40 will be used for seconds.
Examples
theBigDay.setHours(7)
See also
Date.getHours, Date.setUTCHours
Sets the milliseconds for a specified date according to local time.
Syntax
setMilliseconds(millisecondsValue)
Description
If you specify a number outside the expected range, the date information in the Date object is updated accordingly. For example, if you specify 1005, the number of seconds is incremented by 1, and 5 is used for the milliseconds.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setMilliseconds(100);
See also
Date.getMilliseconds, Date.setUTCMilliseconds
Sets the minutes for a specified date according to local time.
Syntax
setMinutes(minutesValue[, secondsValue, msValue])
Versions prior to JavaScript 1.3:
Parameters
Examples
theBigDay.setMinutes(45)
Description
If you do not specify the secondsValue and msValue parameters, the values returned from getSeconds and getMilliseconds methods are used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setMinutes attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 100 for secondsValue, the minutes (minutesValue) will be incremented by 1 (minutesValue + 1), and 40 will be used for seconds.
See also
Date.getMinutes, Date.setUTCMilliseconds
Sets the month for a specified date according to local time.
Syntax
setMonth(monthValue[, dayValue])
Versions prior to JavaScript 1.3:
Parameters
monthValue
An integer between 0 and 11 (representing the months January through December). dayValue
Description
If you do not specify the dayValue parameter, the value returned from the getDate method is used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setMonth attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 15 for monthValue, the year will be incremented by 1 (year + 1), and 3 will be used for month.
Examples
theBigDay.setMonth(6)
See also
Date.getMonth, Date.setUTCMonth
Sets the seconds for a specified date according to local time.
Syntax
setSeconds(secondsValue[, msValue])
Versions prior to JavaScript 1.3:
Parameters
secondsValue
msValue
Description
If you do not specify the msValue parameter, the value returned from the getMilliseconds methods is used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setSeconds attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 100 for secondsValue, the minutes stored in the Date object will be incremented by 1, and 40 will be used for seconds.
Examples
theBigDay.setSeconds(30)
See also
Date.getSeconds, Date.setUTCSeconds
Sets the value of a Date object according to local time.
Parameters
timevalue
An integer representing the number of milliseconds since 1 January 1970 00:00:00.
Description
Use the setTime method to help assign a date and time to another Date object.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date("July 1, 1999")
sameAsBigDay = new Date()
sameAsBigDay.setTime(theBigDay.getTime())
See also
Date.getTime, Date.setUTCHours
Sets the day of the month for a specified date according to universal time.
Description
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setUTCDate attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 40 for dayValue, and the month stored in the Date object is June, the day will be changed to 10 and the month will be incremented to July.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setUTCDate(20);
See also
Date.getUTCDate, Date.setDate
Sets the full year for a specified date according to universal time.
Syntax
setUTCFullYear(yearValue[, monthValue, dayValue])
Parameters
Description
If you do not specify the monthValue and dayValue parameters, the values returned from the getMonth and getDate methods are used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setUTCFullYear attempts to update the other parameters and the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you specify 15 for monthValue, the year is incremented by 1 (year + 1), and 3 is used for the month.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setUTCFullYear(1997);
See also
Date.getUTCFullYear, Date.setFullYear
Sets the hour for a specified date according to universal time.
Syntax
setUTCHour(hoursValue[, minutesValue, secondsValue, msValue])
Parameters
Description
If you do not specify the minutesValue, secondsValue, and msValue parameters, the values returned from the getUTCMinutes, getUTCSeconds, and getUTCMilliseconds methods are used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setUTCHours attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 100 for secondsValue, the minutes will be incremented by 1 (min + 1), and 40 will be used for seconds.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setUTCHour(8);
See also
Date.getUTCHours, Date.setHours
Sets the milliseconds for a specified date according to universal time.
Syntax
setUTCMilliseconds(millisecondsValue)
Description
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setUTCMilliseconds attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 1100 for millisecondsValue, the seconds stored in the Date object will be incremented by 1, and 100 will be used for milliseconds.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setUTCMilliseconds(500);
See also
Date.getUTCMilliseconds, Date.setMilliseconds
Sets the minutes for a specified date according to universal time.
Syntax
setUTCMinutes(minutesValue[, secondsValue, msValue])
Parameters
Description
If you do not specify the secondsValue and msValue parameters, the values returned from getUTCSeconds and getUTCMilliseconds methods are used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setUTCMinutes attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 100 for secondsValue, the minutes (minutesValue) will be incremented by 1 (minutesValue + 1), and 40 will be used for seconds.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setUTCMinutes(43);
See also
Date.getUTCMinutes, Date.setMinutes
Sets the month for a specified date according to universal time.
Syntax
setUTCMonth(monthValue[, dayValue])
Parameters
monthValue
An integer between 0 and 11, representing the months January through December. dayValue
Description
If you do not specify the dayValue parameter, the value returned from the getUTCDate method is used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setUTCMonth attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 15 for monthValue, the year will be incremented by 1 (year + 1), and 3 will be used for month.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setUTCMonth(11);
See also
Date.getUTCMonth, Date.setMonth
Sets the seconds for a specified date according to universal time.
Syntax
setUTCSeconds(secondsValue[, msValue])
Parameters
secondsValue
msValue
Description
If you do not specify the msValue parameter, the value returned from the getUTCMilliseconds methods is used.
If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, setUTCSeconds attempts to update the date information in the Date object accordingly. For example, if you use 100 for secondsValue, the minutes stored in the Date object will be incremented by 1, and 40 will be used for seconds.
Examples
theBigDay = new Date();
theBigDay.setUTCSeconds(20);
See also
Date.getUTCSeconds, Date.setSeconds
Sets the year for a specified date according to local time.
Description
setYear is no longer used and has been replaced by the setFullYear method.
If yearValue is a number between 0 and 99 (inclusive), then the year for dateObjectName is set to 1900 + yearValue. Otherwise, the year for dateObjectName is set to yearValue.
To take into account years before and after 2000, you should use setFullYear instead of setYear so that the year is specified in full.
Examples
Note that there are two ways to set years in the 20th century.
Example 1. The year is set to 1996.
Example 2. The year is set to 1996.
Example 3. The year is set to 2000.
See also
Date.getYear, Date.setFullYear, Date.setUTCFullYear
Converts a date to a string, using the Internet GMT conventions.
Description
toGMTString is no longer used and has been replaced by the toUTCString method.
The exact format of the value returned by toGMTString varies according to the platform.
You should use Date.toUTCString instead of toGMTSTring.
Examples
In the following example, today is a Date object:
In this example, the toGMTString method converts the date to GMT (UTC) using the operating system's time-zone offset and returns a string value that is similar to the following form. The exact format depends on the platform.
See also
Date.toLocaleString, Date.toUTCString
Converts a date to a string, using the current locale's conventions.
Description
The toLocaleString method relies on the underlying operating system in formatting dates. It converts the date to a string using the formatting convention of the operating system where the script is running. For example, in the United States, the month appears before the date (04/15/98), whereas in Germany the date appears before the month (15.04.98). If the operating system is not year-2000 compliant and does not use the full year for years before 1900 or over 2000, toLocaleString returns a string that is not year-2000 compliant. toLocaleString behaves similarly to toString when converting a year that the operating system does not properly format.
Methods such as getHours, getMinutes, and getSeconds give more portable results than toLocaleString.
Examples
In the following example, today is a Date object:
today = new Date(95,11,18,17,28,35) //months are represented by 0 to 11
today.toLocaleString()
In this example, toLocaleString returns a string value that is similar to the following form. The exact format depends on the platform.
See also
Date.toGMTString, Date.toUTCString
Returns a string representing the source code of the object.
Description
The toSource method returns the following values:
For the built-in Date object, toSource returns the following string indicating that the source code is not available:
function Date() {
[native code]
}
For instances of Date, toSource returns a string representing the source code. This method is usually called internally by JavaScript and not explicitly in code.
See also
Object.toSource
Returns a string representing the specified Date object.
Description
The Date object overrides the toString method of the Object object; it does not inherit Object.toString. For Date objects, the toString method returns a string representation of the object.
JavaScript calls the toString method automatically when a date is to be represented as a text value or when a date is referred to in a string concatenation.
Examples
The following example assigns the toString value of a Date object to myVar:
x = new Date();
myVar=x.toString(); //assigns a value to myVar similar to:
//Mon Sep 28 14:36:22 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time) 1998
See also
Object.toString
Converts a date to a string, using the universal time convention.
Description
The value returned by toUTCString is a readable string formatted according to UTC convention. The format of the return value may vary according to the platform.
Examples
var UTCstring;
Today = new Date();
UTCstring = Today.toUTCString();
See also
Date.toLocaleString, Date.toUTCString
Returns the number of milliseconds in a Date object since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00, universal time.
Syntax
Date.UTC(year, month, day[, hrs, min, sec, ms])
Parameters
year
month
date
An integer between 1 and 31 representing the day of the month. hrs
min
sec
ms
Description
UTC takes comma-delimited date parameters and returns the number of milliseconds between January 1, 1970, 00:00:00, universal time and the time you specified.
You should specify a full year for the year; for example, 1998. If a year between 0 and 99 is specified, the method converts the year to a year in the 20th century (1900 + year); for example, if you specify 95, the year 1995 is used.
The UTC method differs from the Date constructor in two ways.
Date.UTC uses universal time instead of the local time.
Date.UTC returns a time value as a number instead of creating a Date object. If a parameter you specify is outside of the expected range, the UTC method updates the other parameters to allow for your number. For example, if you use 15 for month, the year will be incremented by 1 (year + 1), and 3 will be used for the month.
Because UTC is a static method of Date, you always use it as Date.UTC(), rather than as a method of a Date object you created.
Examples
The following statement creates a Date object using GMT instead of local time:
gmtDate = new Date(Date.UTC(96, 11, 1, 0, 0, 0))
See also
Date.parse
Returns the primitive value of a Date object.
Description
The valueOf method of Date returns the primitive value of a Date object as a number data type, the number of milliseconds since midnight 01 January, 1970 UTC.
This method is usually called internally by JavaScript and not explicitly in code.
Examples
x = new Date(56,6,17);
myVar=x.valueOf() //assigns -424713600000 to myVar
See also
Object.valueOf
Previous Contents Index Next
Copyright © 2000 Netscape Communications Corp. All rights reserved.
Last Updated September 28, 2000