Date Utils     

Quasar provides a set of useful functions to manipulate JS Date easily in most use cases, without the high additional cost of integrating dedicated libraries like moment.

Most Quasar date functions take as parameter either a Unix timestamp or a String representing a date which needs to be parsable by the native JS Date constructor. Some examples: 1497159857411, Sun Jun 11 2017 08:44:42 GMT+0300, 2017-06-16.

Returned values are all JS Dates.

Get familiar with JS native Date class, which is very powerful, and remember that you don’t need solutions like Momentjs which add hundreds of minified KB to your bundle.

Helping Tree-Shake

You will notice all examples import date Object from Quasar. However, if you need only one method from it, then you can use ES6 destructuring to help Tree Shaking embed only that method and not all of date.

Example with addToDate():

// we import all of `date`
import { date } from 'quasar'
// destructuring to keep only what is needed
const { addToDate } = date

let newDate = addToDate(new Date(), { days: 7, month: 1 })

Format for display

It takes a string of tokens and replaces them with their corresponding date values:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let timeStamp = Date.now()
let formattedString = date.formatDate(timeStamp, 'YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.SSSZ')

For i18n, you can use a third parameter:

let formattedString = date.formatDate(timesStamp, 'MMMM - dddd', {
dayNames: ['Duminica', 'Luni', /* and all the rest of days - remember starting with Sunday */],
monthNames: ['Ianuarie', 'Februarie', /* and all the rest of months */]
})

Available format tokens:

UnitFormats available
Year
  • YY: 70 71 … 29 30
  • YYYY: 1970 1971 … 2029 2030
Month
  • M: 1 2 … 11 12
  • MM: 01 02 … 11 12
  • MMM: Jan Feb … Nov Dec
  • MMMM: January February … November December
Quarter
  • Q: Quarter number 1 2 3 4
  • Qo: Quarter number 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Day of Month
  • D: 1 2 … 30 31
  • Do: 1st 2nd … 30th 31st
  • DD: 01 02 … 30 31
Day of Year
  • DDD: 1 2 … 364 365
  • DDDD: 001 002 … 364 365
Day of Week
  • d: 0 1 … 5 6
  • dd: Su Mo … Fr Sa
  • ddd: Sun Mon … Fri Sat
  • dddd: Sunday Monday … Friday Saturday
Day of Week (ISO)
  • E: 1 2 … 6 7
Week of Year
  • w: 1 2 … 52 53
  • ww: 01 02 … 52 53
Hour
  • H: 0 1 … 22 23
  • HH: 00 01 … 22 23
  • h: 0 … 11 12
  • hh: 01 02 … 11 12
Minute
  • m: 0 1 … 58 59
  • mm: 00 01 … 58 59
Second
  • s: 0 1 … 58 59
  • ss: 00 01 … 58 59
Fractional Second
  • S: 0 1 … 8 9
  • SS: 00 01 … 98 99
  • SSS: 000 001 … 998 999
Timezone offset
  • Z: -07:00 -06:00 … +06:00 +07:00
  • ZZ: -0700 -0600 … +0600 +0700
AM/PM
  • A: AM, PM
  • a: am, pm
  • aa: a.m, p.m
Unix Timestamp
  • X: 1360013296
  • x (ms): 1360013296123

Manipulate dates

Create

Try to create dates with native JS Date class like so:

let date = new Date();

The following method is just a wrapper to help you in cases where you just need current time but with a different year, or month, or second etc.

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = date.buildDate({ year:2010, date:5, hours:15, milliseconds:123})

You can pass a second argument (a boolean) for setting UTC time (true) instead of local time.

The object literal provided can contain the following keys (all are optional):

KeyDescription
millisecondsfor the milliseconds component of the date/time
secondsfor the seconds component of the date/time
minutesfor the minutes component of the date/time
hoursfor the hours component of the date/time
datefor the day component of the date/time
monthfor the month component of the date/time
yearfor the year component of the date/time

Validate

To check if a date string is valid use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let dateString = 'Wed, 09 Aug 1995 00:00:00 GMT'
if (date.isValid(dateString)) {
// Do something with date string
}

Add/Subtract

To add/subtract some duration to/from a date use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = new Date(2017, 2, 7)

newDate = date.addToDate(newDate, { days: 7, month: 1 })
// `newDate` is now 2017-3-14 00:00:00

newDate = date.subtractFromDate(newDate, { hours: 24, milliseconds: 10000 })
// `newDate` is now 2017-3-12 23:59:50

The object literal provided can contain the following keys (all are optional):

KeyDescription
millisecondsfor a duration in milliseconds
secondsfor a duration in seconds
minutesfor a duration in minutes
hoursfor a duration in hours
daysfor a duration in days
monthfor a duration in months
yearfor a duration in years

Set date/time

To set a specified unit(s) of date/time:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = new Date(2017, 10, 2)
let adjustedDate = date.adjustDate(newDate, { year: 2010, month: 2 })
// `adjustedDate` is 2010-2-2

You can pass a third argument (a Boolean) for setting UTC time (true) instead of local time.

The object literal provided can contain the following keys (all are optional):

KeyDescription
millisecondsfor the milliseconds component of the date/time
secondsfor the seconds component of the date/time
minutesfor the minutes component of the date/time
hoursfor the hours component of the date/time
dayfor the day component of the date/time
monthfor the month component of the date/time
yearfor the year component of the date/time

Query dates

Minimum/Maximum

To get the minimum/maximum date of a date set (i.e. array) use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let dates = [ new Date(2017, 6, 24), new Date(2017, 5, 20), new Date(2017, 6, 26) ]
let min = date.getMinDate(dates) // `min` is 2017-5-20
let max = date.getMaxDate(dates) // `max` is 2017-6-26

// Or simply use multiple parameters:

let min = date.getMinDate(new Date(2017, 6, 24), new Date(2017, 5, 20), new Date(2017, 6, 26))
// `min` is 2017-5-20
let max = date.getMaxDate(new Date(2017, 6, 24), new Date(2017, 5, 20), new Date(2017, 6, 26))
// `max` is 2017-6-26

Time range

To check if a date is in a given date/time range use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let dateTarget = new Date()
let dateFrom = new Date()
let dateTo = new Date()

// **strictly** (i.e. exclusive range)
if (date.isBetweenDates(dateTarget, dateFrom, dateTo)) {
// Do something with dateTarget
}

// including which margin you want
if (date.isBetweenDates(dateTarget, dateFrom, dateTo, { inclusiveFrom: true, inclusiveTo: true })) {
// Do something with dateTarget
}

To normalize a date in a given date/time range use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = new Date()
let dateMin = new Date(2010, 2, 23)
let dateMax = new Date(2012, 4, 12)
let dateNormalized = date.getDateBetween(newDate, dateMin, dateMax)
// Returns `newDate` if it's between 2010-2-23 and 2012-4-12; `dateMin` if it's lower; `dateMax` if it's greater

Equality

To check if two dates’ unit are equal use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let date1 = new Date(2017, 2, 5)
let date2 = new Date(2017, 3, 8)
let unit = 'year'

if (date.isSameDate(date1, date2, /* optional */ unit)) {
// true because date1 and date2's year is the same
}

Unit parameter can be omitted, in which case a full date/time comparison will occur, otherwise it allows to perform partial comparison:

UnitDescription
secondtest if same second only
minutetest if same minute only
hourtest if same hour only
daytest if same day only
monthtest if same month only
yeartest if same year only

Difference

To compute the difference between two dates use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let date1 = new Date(2017, 4, 12)
let date2 = new Date(2017, 3, 8)
let unit = 'days'

let diff = date.getDateDiff(date1, date2, unit)
// `diff` is 34 (days)

The unit parameter indicates the unit of measurement, if not specified then it is days by default:

UnitDescription
secondsdistance in seconds
minutesdistance in minutes
hoursdistance in hours
daysdistance in days
monthsdistance in months
yearsdistance in years

Calendar

To get the ISO week number in year for a given date object use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = new Date(2017, 0, 4)
let week = date.getWeekOfYear(newDate) // `week` is 1

To get the day number in year for a given date object use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = new Date(2017, 1, 4)
let day = date.getDayOfYear(newDate) // `day` is 35

To get the day number in week for a given date object use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = new Date(2017, 1, 9)
let day = date.getDayOfWeek(newDate) // `day` is 4

To get the number of days in the month for the specified date:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = new Date()
let days = date.daysInMonth(newDate) // e.g. 30

Start/End of time

To mutate the original date object by setting it to the start of a unit of time use:

import { date } from 'quasar'

let newDate = new Date(2000)
// set to beginning of year 2000 (January 1st, 2000, 00:00:00.000)
newDate = date.startOfDate(newDate, 'year')
// set to end of year 2000 (December 31st, 2000, 23:59:59.999)
newDate = date.endOfDate(newDate, 'year')

The second parameter indicates a unit to reset to (beginning of it or end of it):

UnitDescription
secondreset seconds
minutereset minutes
hourreset hours
dayreset days
monthreset months
yearreset years

Get Format

import { date } from 'quasar'

date.inferDateFormat(new Date()) // 'date'
date.inferDateFormat(35346363) // 'number'
date.inferDateFormat('Mon Feb 05 2018 23:05:29') // string

Cloning Date

import { date } from 'quasar'

const newDate = new Date()
const clonedDate = date.clone(newDate)

date.addToDate(newDate, { days: 1 })

console.log(newDate.getDate() === clonedDate.getDate()) // false