Reputation: 292
I'm getting a json feed with a date string formatted like the following:
//2012-08-03T23:00:26-05:00
I had thought I could just pass this into a new Date as such
var dt = new Date("2012-08-03T23:00:26-05:00");
This works on jsfiddle but not in google scripts. It's returning an invalid date. After reading this post I recognize it may be how GAS interprets the date string so now I'm not sure how to reformat the date to make it work.
Is there a best way to reformat that date string so GAS can recognize it as a date?
Upvotes: 13
Views: 20863
Reputation: 95
As of now new Date()
seems to work:
var dT = new Date("2012-08-03T23:00:26-05:00");
console.info("dT: %s or %d", dT, dT.getTime());
returns dT: Sat Aug 04 06:00:26 GMT+02:00 2012 or 1.344052826E12
in Google Apps Script
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2053
Google Apps Script uses a particular version of JavaScript (ECMA-262 3rd Edition) and as you have discovered can't parse date/times in ISO 8601 format. Below is a modified function I use in a number of my Apps Scripts
var dt = new Date(getDateFromIso("2012-08-03T23:00:26-05:00"));
// http://delete.me.uk/2005/03/iso8601.html
function getDateFromIso(string) {
try{
var aDate = new Date();
var regexp = "([0-9]{4})(-([0-9]{2})(-([0-9]{2})" +
"(T([0-9]{2}):([0-9]{2})(:([0-9]{2})(\\.([0-9]+))?)?" +
"(Z|(([-+])([0-9]{2}):([0-9]{2})))?)?)?)?";
var d = string.match(new RegExp(regexp));
var offset = 0;
var date = new Date(d[1], 0, 1);
if (d[3]) { date.setMonth(d[3] - 1); }
if (d[5]) { date.setDate(d[5]); }
if (d[7]) { date.setHours(d[7]); }
if (d[8]) { date.setMinutes(d[8]); }
if (d[10]) { date.setSeconds(d[10]); }
if (d[12]) { date.setMilliseconds(Number("0." + d[12]) * 1000); }
if (d[14]) {
offset = (Number(d[16]) * 60) + Number(d[17]);
offset *= ((d[15] == '-') ? 1 : -1);
}
offset -= date.getTimezoneOffset();
time = (Number(date) + (offset * 60 * 1000));
return aDate.setTime(Number(time));
} catch(e){
return;
}
}
Upvotes: 21
Reputation: 468
This worked for me, when converting date-string to date-object in Google Script.
The date-string was taken from the Google Sheet cell by getValues() method.
From: 01.01.2017 22:43:34
to: 2017/01/01 22:43:34
did the job. And then the new Date()
.
var dateTimeObj = new Date(stringDate.replace(/^(\d{1,2})[-.](\d{1,2})[-.](\d{4})/g,"$3/$2/$1"));
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 46794
Found this other possible and very simple code that seems to also do the job :
function test(){
Logger.log(isoToDate("2013-06-15T14:25:58Z"));
Logger.log(isoToDate("2012-08-03T23:00:26-05:00"));
Logger.log(isoToDate("2012-08-03T23:00:26+05:00"));
}
function isoToDate(dateStr){// argument = date string iso format
var str = dateStr.replace(/-/,'/').replace(/-/,'/').replace(/T/,' ').replace(/\+/,' \+').replace(/Z/,' +00');
return new Date(str);
}
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 7947
The hard and sure shot way to make it work if the format is known beforehand is to parse it.
var dtString = "2012-08-03T23:00:26-05:00";
var date = dtString.split('T')[0];
var time = dtString.split('T')[1].split('-')[0];
var tz = dtString.split('T')[1].split('-')[1];
var dt = new Date(date.split('-')[0] , date.split('-')[1] - 1, // month is special
date.split('-')[2], time.split(':')[0],
time.split(':')[1], time.split(':')[2] , 0);
I haven't tested this exact piece of code, but have used similar code. So, this gives you a fair idea of how to proceed.
Upvotes: 1