Moment.js is a great, lightweight date-manipulation library. It also has a very approachable date format syntax that would be familiar to most people who have ever had to fill out a form (e.g., guess what 'YYYY-MM-DD'
means).
Most programmers however, are familiar with other date formatting syntax. The Unix-style strftime
is commonly found in many languages' standard libraries. Unfortunately, it is still absent in JavaScript.
Moment.js helps with a lot of the pain associated with Date
handling in JavaScript, but it doesn't handle strftime
(nor will it, it seems). If you are working in a language that does have strftime
, it seems awkward to have to use another format when using JavaScript (especially if you're trying to keep formats consistent between languages).
That's unfortunate. There are too many (abandoned, buggy) solutions for date handling in JavaScript. Moment.js has the most steam behind it because of all the other features it has going for it.
But... if Moment.js just had strftime
and friends, why would you need anything else? Enter moment-strftime
.
It's preferred that you use Bower, but you can also download the raw JavaScript.
moment-strftime
is available as a Node.js package. The JavaScript itself should work as a CommonJS module, but it has only been tested in Node.js.
npm install moment-strftime
moment-strftime
is a tiny plugin for Moment.js that adds a strftime
method. It's simple:
moment().strftime("%m/%d/%y %I:%M %p %Z"); // => '01/17/12 08:54 PM EST'
In Node.js:
// Gets you everything in Moment.js too
var moment = require('moment-strftime');
moment().strftime("%m/%d/%y %I:%M %p %Z"); // => '01/17/12 08:54 PM EST'
Compatibility: stable Chrome, stable Firefox, stable Safari, IE9+
I've only developed moment-strftime
as far as I need it right now, rather than implementing features I don't need yet. I've noticed that implementing "unused" features often leads to bugs, so the plan is to implement on an as-needed basis.
If you run into an issue or unimplemented feature that you need, please let me know. Contributions are welcome as well.
You'll need Node.js for development.
To get up and running:
npm install
npm test
MIT (see LICENSE
)