Just leverage the built-in toISOString method that brings your date to the ISO 8601 format:
let yourDate = new Date()
yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]
Where yourDate is your date object.
Edit: @exbuddha wrote this to handle time zone in the comments:
const offset = yourDate.getTimezoneOffset()
yourDate = new Date(yourDate.getTime() - (offset*60*1000))
return yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]
Answer from Darth Egregious on Stack OverflowJust leverage the built-in toISOString method that brings your date to the ISO 8601 format:
let yourDate = new Date()
yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]
Where yourDate is your date object.
Edit: @exbuddha wrote this to handle time zone in the comments:
const offset = yourDate.getTimezoneOffset()
yourDate = new Date(yourDate.getTime() - (offset*60*1000))
return yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]
You can do:
function formatDate(date) {
var d = new Date(date),
month = '' + (d.getMonth() + 1),
day = '' + d.getDate(),
year = d.getFullYear();
if (month.length < 2)
month = '0' + month;
if (day.length < 2)
day = '0' + day;
return [year, month, day].join('-');
}
console.log(formatDate('Sun May 11,2014'));
Usage example:
console.log(formatDate('Sun May 11,2014'));
Output:
2014-05-11
Demo on JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/abdulrauf6182012/2Frm3/
Just leverage the built-in toISOString method that brings your date to the ISO 8601 format:
let yourDate = new Date()
yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]
Where yourDate is your date object.
Edit: @exbuddha wrote this to handle time zone in the comments:
const offset = yourDate.getTimezoneOffset()
yourDate = new Date(yourDate.getTime() - (offset*60*1000))
return yourDate.toISOString().split('T')[0]
Answer from Darth Egregious on Stack OverflowTry this; bear in mind that JavaScript months are 0-indexed, whilst days are 1-indexed.
var date = new Date('2010-10-11T00:00:00+05:30');
alert(((date.getMonth() > 8) ? (date.getMonth() + 1) : ('0' + (date.getMonth() + 1))) + '/' + ((date.getDate() > 9) ? date.getDate() : ('0' + date.getDate())) + '/' + date.getFullYear());
Some answers don't quite solve the issue. They print the date formatted as mm/dd/yyyy but the question was regarding MM/dd/yyyy. Notice the subtle difference? MM indicates that a leading zero must pad the month if the month is a single digit, thus having it always be a double digit number.
i.e. whereas mm/dd would be 3/31, MM/dd would be 03/31.
I've created a simple function to achieve this. Notice that the same padding is applied not only to the month but also to the day of the month, which in fact makes this MM/DD/yyyy:
function getFormattedDate(date) {
var year = date.getFullYear();
var month = (1 + date.getMonth()).toString();
month = month.length > 1 ? month : '0' + month;
var day = date.getDate().toString();
day = day.length > 1 ? day : '0' + day;
return month + '/' + day + '/' + year;
}
Update for ES2017 using String.padStart(), supported by all major browsers except IE.
function getFormattedDate(date) {
let year = date.getFullYear();
let month = (1 + date.getMonth()).toString().padStart(2, '0');
let day = date.getDate().toString().padStart(2, '0');
return month + '/' + day + '/' + year;
}
Press the Windows key+R to activate the Run dialog.
Type control intl.cpl then press Enter or click OK.
Click the Additional Settings... button.
Activate the Date tab.
Enter dd.MM.yyyy in the Short Date box - you cannot select it from the drop-down list but you can enter it manually.
Click OK.
Sorry, I cannot help you with that.
I hope this is what you want:
const today = new Date();
const yyyy = today.getFullYear();
let mm = today.getMonth() + 1; // Months start at 0!
let dd = today.getDate();
if (dd < 10) dd = '0' + dd;
if (mm < 10) mm = '0' + mm;
const formattedToday = dd + '/' + mm + '/' + yyyy;
document.getElementById('DATE').value = formattedToday;
How do I get the current date in JavaScript?
I honestly suggest that you use moment.js. Just download moment.min.js and then use this snippet to get your date in whatever format you want:
<script>
$(document).ready(function() {
// set an element
$("#date").val( moment().format('MMM D, YYYY') );
// set a variable
var today = moment().format('D MMM, YYYY');
});
</script>
Use following chart for date formats:
