API / Core / Date

Date

t

RESCRIPT
type t = Js.Date.t

A type representing a JavaScript date.

msSinceEpoch

RESCRIPT
type msSinceEpoch = float

Time, in milliseconds, since / until the UNIX epoch (January 1, 1970 00:00:00 UTC). Positive numbers represent dates after, negative numbers dates before epoch.

localeOptions

RESCRIPT
type localeOptions = { dateStyle?: [#full | #long | #medium | #short], timeStyle?: [#full | #long | #medium | #short], weekday?: [#long | #narrow | #short], era?: [#long | #narrow | #short], year?: [#\"2-digit\" | #numeric], month?: [ | #\"2-digit\" | #long | #narrow | #numeric | #short ], day?: [#\"2-digit\" | #numeric], hour?: [#\"2-digit\" | #numeric], minute?: [#\"2-digit\" | #numeric], second?: [#\"2-digit\" | #numeric], timeZoneName?: [#long | #short], }

A type representing date time format options.

Note: There are some properties missing:

  • fractionalSecondDigits

  • dayPeriod

  • calendar

  • numberingSystem

  • localeMatcher

  • timeZone

  • hour12

  • hourCycle

  • formatMatcher

See full spec at https://tc39.es/ecma402/#datetimeformat-objects

make

RESCRIPT
let make: unit => t

make()

Creates a date object with the current date time as value.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()

fromString

RESCRIPT
let fromString: string => t

fromString(dateTimeString)

Creates a date object from given date time string. The string has to be in the ISO 8601 format YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ (https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-date-time-string-format).

Invalid date time strings will create invalid dates. You can use the result like any valid date, but many functions like toString will return "Invalid Date" or functions like Date.getTime will return NaN.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023") // 2023-01-01T00:00:00.000Z Date.fromString("2023-02-20") // 2023-02-20T00:00:00.000Z Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00Z") // 2023-02-20T16:40:00.000Z Date.fromString("") // Invalid Date Date.fromString("")->getTime // NaN

fromTime

RESCRIPT
let fromTime: msSinceEpoch => t

fromTime(msSinceEpoch)

Creates a date object from the given time in milliseconds since / until UNIX epoch (January 1, 1970 00:00:00 UTC). Positive numbers create dates after epoch, negative numbers create dates before epoch.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromTime(0.0) // 1970-01-01T00:00:00.000Z Date.fromTime(-86_400_000.0) // 1969-12-31T00:00:00.000Z Date.fromTime(86_400_000.0) // 1970-01-02T00:00:00.000Z

makeWithYM

RESCRIPT
let makeWithYM: (~year: int, ~month: int) => t

Creates a date object with the given year and month. Be aware of using a value for year < 100, because it behaves inconsistent (see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date#interpretation_of_two-digit_years). Months are 0-indexed (0 = January, 11 = December). Values, which are out of range, will be carried over to the next bigger unit (s. example).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.makeWithYM(~year=2023, ~month=0) // 2023-01-01T00:00:00.000Z Date.makeWithYM(~year=2023, ~month=11) // 2023-12-01T00:00:00.000Z Date.makeWithYM(~year=2023, ~month=12) // 2024-01-01T00:00:00.000Z Date.makeWithYM(~year=2023, ~month=-1) // 2022-12-01T00:00:00.000Z // Note: The output depends on your local time zone. // In nodejs you can change it by using the TZ env (`export TZ='Europe/London' && node index.bs.js`)

makeWithYMD

RESCRIPT
let makeWithYMD: (~year: int, ~month: int, ~date: int) => t

Creates a date object with the given year, month and date (day of month). Be aware of using a value for year < 100, because it behaves inconsistent (see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date#interpretation_of_two-digit_years). Months are 0-indexed (0 = January, 11 = December). Values, which are out of range, will be carried over to the next bigger unit (s. example).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.makeWithYMD(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20) // 2023-02-20T00:00:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMD(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=-1) // 2022-11-29T00:00:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMD(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=29) // 2023-03-01T00:00:00.000Z

makeWithYMDH

RESCRIPT
let makeWithYMDH: (~year: int, ~month: int, ~date: int, ~hours: int) => t

Creates a date object with the given year, month, date (day of month) and hours. Be aware of using a value for year < 100, because it behaves inconsistent (see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date#interpretation_of_two-digit_years). Months are 0-indexed (0 = January, 11 = December). Values, which are out of range, will be carried over to the next bigger unit (s. example).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.makeWithYMDH(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16) // 2023-02-20T16:00:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMDH(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=24) // 2023-02-21T00:00:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMDH(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=-1) // 2023-02-19T23:00:00.000Z // Note: The output depends on your local time zone. // In nodejs you can change it by using the TZ env (`export TZ='Europe/London' && node index.bs.js`)

makeWithYMDHM

RESCRIPT
let makeWithYMDHM: ( ~year: int, ~month: int, ~date: int, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int, ) => t

Creates a date object with the given year, month, date (day of month), hours and minutes. Be aware of using a value for year < 100, because it behaves inconsistent (see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date#interpretation_of_two-digit_years). Months are 0-indexed (0 = January, 11 = December). Values, which are out of range, will be carried over to the next bigger unit (s. example).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.makeWithYMDHM(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=40) // 2023-02-20T16:40:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMDHM(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=60) // 2023-02-20T17:00:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMDHM(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=-1) // 2023-02-20T15:59:00.000Z // Note: The output depends on your local time zone. // In nodejs you can change it by using the TZ env (`export TZ='Europe/London' && node index.bs.js`)

makeWithYMDHMS

RESCRIPT
let makeWithYMDHMS: ( ~year: int, ~month: int, ~date: int, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int, ) => t

Creates a date object with the given year, month, date (day of month), hours, minutes and seconds. Be aware of using a value for year < 100, because it behaves inconsistent (see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date#interpretation_of_two-digit_years). Months are 0-indexed (0 = January, 11 = December). Values, which are out of range, will be carried over to the next bigger unit (s. example).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.makeWithYMDHMS(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=40, ~seconds=0) // 2023-02-20T16:40:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMDHMS(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=40, ~seconds=60) // 2023-02-20T16:41:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMDHMS(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=40, ~seconds=-1) // 2023-02-20T16:39:59.000Z // Note: The output depends on your local time zone. // In nodejs you can change it by using the TZ env (`export TZ='Europe/London' && node index.bs.js`)

makeWithYMDHMSM

RESCRIPT
let makeWithYMDHMSM: ( ~year: int, ~month: int, ~date: int, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int, ~milliseconds: int, ) => t

Creates a date object with the given year, month, date (day of month), hours, minutes, seconds and milliseconds. Be aware of using a value for year < 100, because it behaves inconsistent (see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date#interpretation_of_two-digit_years). Months are 0-indexed (0 = January, 11 = December). Values, which are out of range, will be carried over to the next bigger unit (s. example).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.makeWithYMDHMSM(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=40, ~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=0) // 2023-02-20T16:40:00.000Z Date.makeWithYMDHMSM(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=40, ~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=1000) // 2023-02-20T16:40:01.000Z Date.makeWithYMDHMSM(~year=2023, ~month=1, ~date=20, ~hours=16, ~minutes=40, ~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=-1) // 2023-02-20T16:39:59.999Z // Note: The output depends on your local time zone. // In nodejs you can change it by using the TZ env (`export TZ='Europe/London' && node index.bs.js`)

now

RESCRIPT
let now: unit => msSinceEpoch

now()

Returns the time, in milliseconds, between UNIX epoch (January 1, 1970 00:00:00 UTC) and the current date time.

equal

RESCRIPT
let equal: (t, t) => bool

compare

RESCRIPT
let compare: (t, t) => Core__Ordering.t

getTime

RESCRIPT
let getTime: t => msSinceEpoch

getTime(date)

Returns the time, in milliseconds, between UNIX epoch (January 1, 1970 00:00:00 UTC) and the current date time. Invalid dates will return NaN. Dates before epoch will return negative numbers.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20")->Date.getTime // 1676851200000

getTimezoneOffset

RESCRIPT
let getTimezoneOffset: t => int

getTimezoneOffset(date)

Returns the time in minutes between the UTC time and the locale time. The timezone of the given date doesn't matter.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01")->Date.getTimezoneOffset // -60 with local time zone = Europe/Berlin Date.fromString("2023-06-01")->Date.getTimezoneOffset // -120 with local time zone = Europe/Berlin

getFullYear

RESCRIPT
let getFullYear: t => int

getFullYear(date)

Returns the year of a given date (according to local time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20")->Date.getFullYear // 2023

getMonth

RESCRIPT
let getMonth: t => int

getMonth(date)

Returns the month (0-indexed) of a given date (according to local time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01")->Date.getMonth // 0

getDate

RESCRIPT
let getDate: t => int

getDate(date)

Returns the date (day of month) of a given date (according to local time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.getDate // 20

getHours

RESCRIPT
let getHours: t => int

getHours(date)

Returns the hours of a given date (according to local time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.getHours // 16

getMinutes

RESCRIPT
let getMinutes: t => int

getMinutes(date)

Returns the minutes of a given date (according to local time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.getMinutes // 40

getSeconds

RESCRIPT
let getSeconds: t => int

getSeconds(date)

Returns the seconds of a given date (according to local time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.getSeconds // 0

getMilliseconds

RESCRIPT
let getMilliseconds: t => int

getMilliseconds(date)

Returns the milliseconds of a given date (according to local time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.getMilliseconds // 0

getDay

RESCRIPT
let getDay: t => int

getDay(date)

Returns the day of week of a given date (according to local time). 0 = Sunday, 1 = Monday, ... 6 = Saturday

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.getDay // 1

setFullYear

RESCRIPT
let setFullYear: (t, int) => unit

setFullYear(date, year)

Sets the year of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setFullYear(2024)

setFullYearM

RESCRIPT
let setFullYearM: (t, ~year: int, ~month: int) => unit

setFullYearM(date, ~year, ~month)

Sets the year and month of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setFullYearM(~year=2024, ~month=0)

setFullYearMD

RESCRIPT
let setFullYearMD: (t, ~year: int, ~month: int, ~date: int) => unit

setFullYearMD(date, ~year, ~month, ~date)

Sets the year, month and date (day of month) of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setFullYearMD(~year=2024, ~month=0, ~date=1)

setMonth

RESCRIPT
let setMonth: (t, int) => unit

setMonth(date, month)

Sets the month of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setMonth(0)

setDate

RESCRIPT
let setDate: (t, int) => unit

setDate(date, day)

Sets the date (day of month) of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setDate(1)

setHours

RESCRIPT
let setHours: (t, int) => unit

setHours(date, hours)

Sets the hours of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setHours(0)

setHoursM

RESCRIPT
let setHoursM: (t, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int) => unit

setHoursM(date, ~hours, ~minutes)

Sets the hours and minutes of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setHoursM(~hours=0, ~minutes=0)

setHoursMS

RESCRIPT
let setHoursMS: (t, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int) => unit

setHoursMS(date, ~hours, ~minutes, ~seconds)

Sets the hours, minutes and seconds of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setHoursMS(~hours=0, ~minutes=0, ~seconds=0)

setHoursMSMs

RESCRIPT
let setHoursMSMs: ( t, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int, ~milliseconds: int, ) => unit

setHoursMSMs(date, ~hours, ~minutes, ~seconds, ~milliseconds)

Sets the hours, minutes, seconds and milliseconds of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setHoursMSMs(~hours=0, ~minutes=0, ~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=0)

setMinutes

RESCRIPT
let setMinutes: (t, int) => unit

setMinutes(date, minutes)

Sets the minutes of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setMinutes(0)

setMinutesS

RESCRIPT
let setMinutesS: (t, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int) => unit

setMinutesS(date, ~minutes, ~seconds)

Sets the minutes and seconds of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setMinutesS(~minutes=0, ~seconds=0)

setMinutesSMs

RESCRIPT
let setMinutesSMs: ( t, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int, ~milliseconds: int, ) => unit

setMinutesSMs(date, ~minutes, ~seconds, ~milliseconds)

Sets the minutes, seconds and milliseconds of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setMinutesSMs(~minutes=0, ~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=0)

setSeconds

RESCRIPT
let setSeconds: (t, int) => unit

setSeconds(date, seconds)

Sets the seconds of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setSeconds(0)

setSecondsMs

RESCRIPT
let setSecondsMs: (t, ~seconds: int, ~milliseconds: int) => unit

setSecondsMs(date, ~seconds, ~milliseconds)

Sets the seconds and milliseconds of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setSecondsMs(~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=0)

setMilliseconds

RESCRIPT
let setMilliseconds: (t, int) => unit

setMilliseconds(date, milliseconds)

Sets the milliseconds of a date (according to local time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setMilliseconds(0)

getUTCFullYear

RESCRIPT
let getUTCFullYear: t => int

getUTCFullYear(date)

Returns the year of a given date (according to UTC time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00").getUTCFullYear // 2022

getUTCMonth

RESCRIPT
let getUTCMonth: t => int

getUTCMonth(date)

Returns the month of a given date (according to UTC time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00").getUTCMonth // 11

getUTCDate

RESCRIPT
let getUTCDate: t => int

getUTCDate(date)

Returns the date (day of month) of a given date (according to UTC time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00").getUTCDate // 31

getUTCHours

RESCRIPT
let getUTCHours: t => int

getUTCHours(date)

Returns the hours of a given date (according to UTC time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00").getUTCHours // 23

getUTCMinutes

RESCRIPT
let getUTCMinutes: t => int

getUTCMinutes(date)

Returns the minutes of a given date (according to UTC time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00").getUTCMinutes // 0

getUTCSeconds

RESCRIPT
let getUTCSeconds: t => int

getUTCSeconds(date)

Returns the seconds of a given date (according to UTC time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00").getUTCSeconds // 0

getUTCMilliseconds

RESCRIPT
let getUTCMilliseconds: t => int

getUTCMilliseconds(date)

Returns the milliseconds of a given date (according to UTC time).

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00").getUTCMilliseconds // 0

getUTCDay

RESCRIPT
let getUTCDay: t => int

getUTCDay(date)

Returns the day (day of week) of a given date (according to UTC time). 0 = Sunday, 1 = Monday, ... 6 = Saturday

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00").getUTCDay // 6

setUTCFullYear

RESCRIPT
let setUTCFullYear: (t, int) => unit

setUTCFullYear(date, year)

Sets the year of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCFullYear(2024)

setUTCFullYearM

RESCRIPT
let setUTCFullYearM: (t, ~year: int, ~month: int) => unit

setUTCFullYearM(date, ~year, ~month)

Sets the year and month of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCFullYearM(~year=2024, ~month=0)

setUTCFullYearMD

RESCRIPT
let setUTCFullYearMD: (t, ~year: int, ~month: int, ~date: int) => unit

setUTCFullYearMD(date, ~year, ~month, ~date)

Sets the year, month and date (day of month) of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCFullYearMD(~year=2024, ~month=0, ~date=1)

setUTCMonth

RESCRIPT
let setUTCMonth: (t, int) => unit

setUTCMonth(date, month)

Sets the month of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCMonth(0)

setUTCDate

RESCRIPT
let setUTCDate: (t, int) => unit

setDate(date, day)

Sets the date (day of month) of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCDate(1)

setUTCHours

RESCRIPT
let setUTCHours: (t, int) => unit

setUTCHours(date, hours)

Sets the hours of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCHours(0)

setUTCHoursM

RESCRIPT
let setUTCHoursM: (t, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int) => unit

setHoursM(date, ~hours, ~minutes)

Sets the hours and minutes of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCHoursM(~hours=0, ~minutes=0)

setUTCHoursMS

RESCRIPT
let setUTCHoursMS: (t, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int) => unit

setUTCHoursMS(date, ~hours, ~minutes, ~seconds)

Sets the hours, minutes and seconds of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCHoursMS(~hours=0, ~minutes=0, ~seconds=0)

setUTCHoursMSMs

RESCRIPT
let setUTCHoursMSMs: ( t, ~hours: int, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int, ~milliseconds: int, ) => unit

setUTCHoursMSMs(date, ~hours, ~minutes, ~seconds, ~milliseconds)

Sets the hours, minutes, seconds and milliseconds of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCHoursMSMs(~hours=0, ~minutes=0, ~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=0)

setUTCMinutes

RESCRIPT
let setUTCMinutes: (t, int) => unit

setUTCMinutes(date, minutes)

Sets the minutes of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCMinutes(0)

setUTCMinutesS

RESCRIPT
let setUTCMinutesS: (t, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int) => unit

setUTCMinutesS(date, ~minutes, ~seconds)

Sets the minutes and seconds of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCMinutesS(~minutes=0, ~seconds=0)

setUTCMinutesSMs

RESCRIPT
let setUTCMinutesSMs: ( t, ~minutes: int, ~seconds: int, ~milliseconds: int, ) => unit

setUTCMinutesSMs(date, ~minutes, ~seconds, ~milliseconds)

Sets the minutes, seconds and milliseconds of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCMinutesSMs(~minutes=0, ~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=0)

setUTCSeconds

RESCRIPT
let setUTCSeconds: (t, int) => unit

setUTCSeconds(date, seconds)

Sets the seconds of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCSeconds(0)

setUTCSecondsMs

RESCRIPT
let setUTCSecondsMs: (t, ~seconds: int, ~milliseconds: int) => unit

setUTCSecondsMs(date, ~seconds, ~milliseconds)

Sets the seconds and milliseconds of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCSecondsMs(~seconds=0, ~milliseconds=0)

setUTCMilliseconds

RESCRIPT
let setUTCMilliseconds: (t, int) => unit

setUTCMilliseconds(date, milliseconds)

Sets the milliseconds of a date (according to UTC time). Beware this will mutate the date.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-02-20T16:40:00.00")->Date.setUTCMilliseconds(0)

toDateString

RESCRIPT
let toDateString: t => string

toDateString(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to a standard date string. The date will be mapped to the current time zone. If you want to convert it to a localized string, use Date.toLocaleDateString instead.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00")->Date.toDateString->Console.log // Sun Jan 01 2023 Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+08:00")->Date.toDateString->Console.log // Sat Dec 31 2022

toString

RESCRIPT
let toString: t => string

toString(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to a standard date time string. The date will be mapped to the current time zone. If you want to convert it to a localized string, use Date.toLocaleString instead.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00")->Date.toString->Console.log // Sun Jan 01 2023 00:00:00 GMT+0100 (Central European Standard Time) Date.fromString("2023-06-01T00:00:00.00+01:00")->Date.toString->Console.log // Thu Jun 01 2023 01:00:00 GMT+0200 (Central European Summer Time)

toTimeString

RESCRIPT
let toTimeString: t => string

toTimeString(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to a standard time string. The date will be mapped to the current time zone. If you want to convert it to a localized string, use Date.toLocaleStimeString instead.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+01:00")->Date.toTimeString->Console.log // 00:00:00 GMT+0100 (Central European Standard Time) Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+08:00")->Date.toTimeString->Console.log // 17:00:00 GMT+0100 (Central European Standard Time)

toLocaleDateString

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleDateString: t => string

toLocaleDateString(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized date string. It will use the current locale.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleDateString->Console.log // 2/19/2023

toLocaleDateStringWithLocale

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleDateStringWithLocale: (t, string) => string

toLocaleDateStringWithLocale(date, locale)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized date string. It will use the specified locale.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleDateStringWithLocale("en-US")->Console.log // 2/19/2023

toLocaleDateStringWithLocaleAndOptions

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleDateStringWithLocaleAndOptions: (t, string, localeOptions) => string

toLocaleDateStringWithLocaleAndOptions(date, locale, options)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized date string. It will use the specified locale and formatting options.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleDateStringWithLocaleAndOptions("en-US", { dateStyle: #long })->Console.log // February 19, 2023 Date.make()->Date.toLocaleDateStringWithLocaleAndOptions("de", { hour: #"2-digit", minute: #"2-digit" })->Console.log // 19.2.2023, 15:40 Date.make()->Date.toLocaleDateStringWithLocaleAndOptions("de", { year: #numeric })->Console.log // 2023

toLocaleString

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleString: t => string

toLocaleString(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized date-time string. It will use the current locale.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleString->Console.log // 2/19/2023, 3:40:00 PM

toLocaleStringWithLocale

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleStringWithLocale: (t, string) => string

toLocaleStringWithLocale(date, locale)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized date-time string. It will use the specified locale.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleStringWithLocale("en-US")->Console.log // 2/19/2023, 3:40:00 PM

toLocaleStringWithLocaleAndOptions

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleStringWithLocaleAndOptions: (t, string, localeOptions) => string

toLocaleStringWithLocaleAndOptions(date, locale, options)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized date-time string. It will use the specified locale and formatting options.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleStringWithLocaleAndOptions("en", { dateStyle: #short, timeStyle: #short })->Console.log // 2/19/23, 3:40 PM Date.make()->Date.toLocaleStringWithLocaleAndOptions("en", { era: #long, year: #numeric, month: #"2-digit", day: #"2-digit", hour: #numeric, timeZoneName: #short })->Console.log // 02/19/2023 Anno Domini, 3 PM GMT+1

toLocaleTimeString

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleTimeString: t => string

toLocaleTimeString(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized time string. It will use the current locale.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleTimeString->Console.log // 3:40:00 PM

toLocaleTimeStringWithLocale

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleTimeStringWithLocale: (t, string) => string

toLocaleTimeStringWithLocale(date, locale)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized time string. It will use the specified locale.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleTimeStringWithLocale("en-US")->Console.log // 3:40:00 PM

toLocaleTimeStringWithLocaleAndOptions

RESCRIPT
let toLocaleTimeStringWithLocaleAndOptions: (t, string, localeOptions) => string

toLocaleTimeStringWithLocaleAndOptions(date, locale, options)

Converts a JavaScript date to a localized time string. It will use the specified locale and formatting options.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.make()->Date.toLocaleTimeStringWithLocaleAndOptions("en-US", { timeStyle: #long })->Console.log // 3:40:00 PM GMT+1 Date.make()->Date.toLocaleTimeStringWithLocaleAndOptions("de", { hour: #"2-digit", minute: #"2-digit" })->Console.log // 15:40

toISOString

RESCRIPT
let toISOString: t => string

toISOString(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to a ISO 8601 string (YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ). The date will be mapped to the UTC time.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+00:00")->Date.toISOString->Console.log // 2023-01-01T00:00:00.000Z Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+08:00")->Date.toISOString->Console.log // 2022-12-31T16:00:00.000Z

toUTCString

RESCRIPT
let toUTCString: t => string

toUTCString(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to date time string. The date will be mapped to the UTC time.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+00:00")->Date.toUTCString->Console.log // Sun, 01 Jan 2023 00:00:00 GMT Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+08:00")->Date.toUTCString->Console.log // Sat, 31 Dec 2022 16:00:00 GMT

toJSON

RESCRIPT
let toJSON: t => option<string>

toJSON(date)

Converts a JavaScript date to a string. If the date is valid, the function will return the same result as Date.toISOString. Invalid dates will return None.

Examples

RESCRIPT
Date.fromString("2023-01-01T00:00:00.00+00:00")->Date.toJSON // Some("2023-01-01T00:00:00.000Z") Date.fromString("")->Date.toJSON // None