Features • Installation • Example • Usage
intl-dateformat is a simple date formatting library that leverage the Intl.DateTimeFormat API to format dates in different languages and timezones without having to clutter your JavaScript bundles.
- ✌ Small: As it directly leverages
Intl.DateTimeFormat
, there is no need to bundle additional locales or a timezones database. It's already in your Browser! - 👌Simple: It supports a subset of ISO 8601 formats, discarding very rarely used date parts.
- 🤟 Extensible: That said, if you want to customize things you can pass custom formatters.
$ npm install intl-dateformat
import formatDate from 'intl-dateformat'
const date = new Date(Date.UTC(1984, 0, 17, 16, 13, 37, 0))
formatDate(date, 'YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss A')
// → 1984-01-17 04:13:37 PM
formatDate(date, 'YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss A', { timezone: 'Asia/Singapore' })
// → 1984-01-18 00:13:37 AM
formatDate(date, 'YYYY, MMMM dddd DD')
// → 1984, January Tuesday 17
formatDate(date, '[It is] dddd [today!]')
// → It is Tuesday today!
formatDate(date, 'YYYY, MMMM dddd DD', { locale: 'fr' })
// → 1984, Janvier Mardi 17
import formatDate from 'intl-dateformat'
const date = new Date(Date.UTC(1984, 0, 17, 16, 13, 37, 0))
formatDate(date, 'YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss A')
// → 1984-01-17 04:13:37 PM
Argument | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
date |
The date to format | Date , number |
format |
The format to use | See Format |
options |
Custom locale or timezone | See Options |
The format is a combination of the following masks:
Mask | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
YYYY |
4-digits year | 1984 |
YY |
2-digits year | 84 |
MMMM |
Month name | January |
MMM |
Short month name | Jan |
DD |
2-digits day | 17 |
dddd |
Day of the week | Tuesday |
ddd |
Short day of the week | Tue |
A |
Day period | AM , PM |
a |
Lowercased day period | am , pm |
HH |
24-hours hour | 16 |
hh |
12-hours hour | 04 |
mm |
2-digit minute | 13 |
ss |
2-digit second | 37 |
Masks will be replaced by their associated date part.
You can also pass string literals in the format by surrouding them with a []
:
formatDate(date, '[It is] dddd [today!]')
// → It is Tuesday today!
locale
- A BCP 47 tag to identify the output language- Type:
string
- Default: The system locale
- Example:
fr
,fr-FR
- Type:
timezone
- A IANA timezone- Type:
string
- Default: The system timezone
- Example:
Europe/Paris
,America/Chicago
- Type:
If you find yourself missing some date parts, no problem we got you covered. You can create your own dateFormat
function and add your custom formatters:
import { createDateFormatter } from 'intl-dateformat'
const formatDate = createDateFormatter({
// numeric hour
h: ({ hour }) => hour[0] === '0' ? hour[1] : hour
// milliseconds
SSS: (parts, date) => String(date.getTime()).slice(-3)
})
const date = new Date(Date.UTC(1984, 0, 17, 16, 13, 37, 0))
formatDate(date, 'YYYY-MM-DD h:mm:ss.SSS')
// → 1984-01-17 4:13:37.505
Argument | Description | Type |
---|---|---|
formatters |
Custom formatters | See Formatters |
Formatters are represented as a dictionary of functions, where the key represents the mask that is to be matched in the format
and the value is the function that will format the date.
The formatter function takes the following arguments:
parts
- An object containing all the date parts provided byIntl.DateTimeFormat
. You can inspect the DatePartName type for an exhaustive list of all the date partsdate
- The original date passed to theformatDate
function.