full-day-range
Given a date, provide a full day range, or custom subset. Timezone aware.
example
var dayRange = require('full-day-range')
var day = new Date('2017-01-01T14:30:00')
var range = dayRange(day)
console.log(range.map(d => d.toString()))
var exclusiveRange = dayRange(day, { exclusive: true })
console.log(exclusiveRange.map(d => d.toString()))
timezones
When working in other timezone, you would probably want the day range in original timezone. But internaly, JavaScript is not anymore aware of the timezone, which lead to unexpected results.
To work in other timezone, just pass the timezone
option. It could be a valid ISO string or an numerical offset (in minutes).
var dayRange = require('full-day-range')
var tzVancouver = new Intl.DateTimeFormat('en-CA', {
timeZone: 'America/Vancouver',
year: 'numeric', month: 'long', day: 'numeric',
hour: 'numeric', minute: 'numeric', second: 'numeric',
hour12: false
})
var timezoneISODateString = '2017-01-01T14:30:00-08:00'
var day = new Date(timezoneISODateString)
var range = dayRange(day)
console.log(range.map(d => d.toString()))
var timezoneRange = dayRange(day, { timezone: '-08:00' })
console.log(timezoneRange.map(d => d.toString()))
console.log(timezoneRange.map(tzVancouver.format))
var easyTzRange = dayRange(timezoneISODateString)
console.log(easyTzRange.map(tzVancouver.format))
var localRange = dayRange(day, { timezone: '-08:00', localTime: true })
console.log(localRange.map(d => d.toString()))
custom day range
Default range is 00:00
current day to 00:00 day +1
(full day interval). If you prefer a custom range while, a range option is available. And it's still getting the timezone alright.
The range is be set with an array of milliseconds (from 00:00
current day). Default is [0, 24*60*60*1000]
.
To allow more convenience, the tiny parse-time-to-ms
module could be use.
var dayRange = require('full-day-range')
var parseTime = require('parse-time-to-ms')
var day = new Date('2017-01-01T14:30:00')
var timeRange = parseTime.s('18:00', '23:30')
var dayCustomRange = dayInterval(day, { range: timeRange })
console.log(dayCustomRange.map(d => d.toString()))
// [ 'Sun Jan 01 2017 18:00:00 GMT+1100 (DST)', 'Sun Jan 01 2017 23:30:00 GMT+1100 (DST)' ]
api
var dayRange = require('full-day-range')
var range = dayRange(dayDate, [opts])
Return an array of two dates, starting at dayDate 00:00:00.000
to dayDate +1 00:00:00.000
.
dayDate
Any valid value for the Date
constructor. This is the base date for the range.
opts
opts.range
- Default is [0, 24*60*60*1000]
. Array of milliseconds to offset the range: [startMs, endMs]
.
If endMs
< startMs
, it will be considered as next day.opts.exclusive
- default false
. Exclude the last millisecond, so the day range is current day from 00:00:00.000
to 23:59:59.999
.opts.timezone
- Valid ISO 8601 date string or timezone string. Change the timezone to work with.opts.localTime
- default false
. Convert the range to local timezone (only usefull with opts.timezone
specified).
license
MIT
install
npm install full-day-range
see also