Introduction
I needed a JavaScript date format function such as the Visual Basic Format
function, in which you can pass a format string; my first approach was to issue a series of consecutive and "destructive" replace calls, but upon discovering that the 5.5 (or higher) version of JScript supported the use of a function as the replaceText
argument of the replace
method, I got creative.
Here's an example call of what I wanted:
SomeDiv.innerText = (new Date()).format('dddd, mmmm dd, yyyy.');
This would display:
Saturday, July 16, 2005
So in my first approach, I globally and case-insensitively replaced dddd with the corresponding string, which "destroyed" every occurrence, so that later in the code I could replace dd with the date number.
This worked just fine, but I knew that by inspecting the format specifier for a match, I could skip the search of every format specifier; say I only want the month and the date; well, by switching upon the format specifier (or rather "datepart" specifier), the year replacement will never be issued. Get it?
The fun part relies in the use of a function in the replaceText
argument of the replace
method; this way the $1
property as a function argument always represents the last match.
Other considerations include the format or "datepart" specifiers: none other than yyyy
will be parsed as the year; months and days have the usual three flavors of fullname (mmmm
), three-letter (mmm
) or numeric (mm
); hours (hh
) can be rectified to the 12-hour format with the a/p
specifier, and minutes (nn
) and seconds (ss
) may also be specified.
Implementation
WOFA, (Without Further Adou):
var gsMonthNames = new Array(
'January',
'February',
'March',
'April',
'May',
'June',
'July',
'August',
'September',
'October',
'November',
'December'
);
var gsDayNames = new Array(
'Sunday',
'Monday',
'Tuesday',
'Wednesday',
'Thursday',
'Friday',
'Saturday'
);
Date.prototype.format = function(f)
{
if (!this.valueOf())
return ' ';
var d = this;
return f.replace(/(yyyy|mmmm|mmm|mm|dddd|ddd|dd|hh|nn|ss|a\/p)/gi,
function($1)
{
switch ($1.toLowerCase())
{
case 'yyyy': return d.getFullYear();
case 'mmmm': return gsMonthNames[d.getMonth()];
case 'mmm': return gsMonthNames[d.getMonth()].substr(0, 3);
case 'mm': return (d.getMonth() + 1).zf(2);
case 'dddd': return gsDayNames[d.getDay()];
case 'ddd': return gsDayNames[d.getDay()].substr(0, 3);
case 'dd': return d.getDate().zf(2);
case 'hh': return ((h = d.getHours() % 12) ? h : 12).zf(2);
case 'nn': return d.getMinutes().zf(2);
case 'ss': return d.getSeconds().zf(2);
case 'a/p': return d.getHours() < 12 ? 'a' : 'p';
}
}
);
}
Notes
- A date with a value of 0 returns a non-breaking space.
- Notice how the
d
variable is available to the replacement function (but the this
object is not).
- The
zf
number prototype can be found in Extending JavaScript Objects with Prototypes, where it is called 'zp' for zero padding. It pads a number with zeroes the specified number of times, up to the number's character length, i.e. 2 turns into 02, but 16 remains 16.
- The regular expression looks for any of the bracketed pattern characters in a two+ sequence, or for the very specific a/p match.
- Defining names globally helps and serves other purposes, i.e. listing days in a calendar.
Enjoy.