Formatting Tokens
Each character in the table below can be used in dateFormat
and altFormat
options to achieve the format you need.
Date Formatting Tokens
Character | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
d | Day of the month, 2 digits with leading zeros | 01 to 31 |
D | A textual representation of a day | Mon through Sun |
l (lowercase 'L') | A full textual representation of the day of the week | Sunday through Saturday |
j | Day of the month without leading zeros | 1 to 31 |
J | Day of the month without leading zeros and ordinal suffix | 1st, 2nd, to 31st |
w | Numeric representation of the day of the week | 0 (for Sunday) through 6 (for Saturday) |
W | Numeric representation of the week | 0 (first week of the year) through 52 (last week of the year) |
F | A full textual representation of a month | January through December |
m | Numeric representation of a month, with leading zero | 01 through 12 |
n | Numeric representation of a month, without leading zeros | 1 through 12 |
M | A short textual representation of a month | Jan through Dec |
U | The number of seconds since the Unix Epoch | 1413704993 |
y | A two digit representation of a year | 99 or 03 |
Y | A full numeric representation of a year, 4 digits | 1999 or 2003 |
Z | ISO Date format | 2017-03-04T01:23:43.000Z |
Time Formatting Tokens
Character | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
H | Hours (24 hours) | 00 to 23 |
h | Hours | 1 to 12 |
G | Hours, 2 digits with leading zeros | 1 to 12 |
i | Minutes | 00 to 59 |
S | Seconds, 2 digits | 00 to 59 |
s | Seconds | 0, 1 to 59 |
K | AM/PM | AM or PM |
Escaping Formatting Tokens
You may escape formatting tokens using \
.
{
dateFormat: "Y-m-d\\Z", // Displays: 2017-01-22Z
}