Awesome
jalali-ts
Parse and interact with jalali date
This lib inspired by moment-jalaali
Thanks to all contributors
Why jalali-ts?
You may ask yourself we already have moment-jalaali
which is even more powerful in some cases!
So why jalali-ts
?
Because moment
is a legacy project and according to its document you should avoid using it in the new projects!
Pros:
- No dependencies!
- TypeScript
- Modern JavaScript (ES2020)
Cons:
- Limitation for parsing input date
- Limitation for output format
Install
npm install jalali-ts
Supported formats
YYYY
yearMM
monthDD
dateHH
hours (standard 24h)hh
hours (12h format)mm
minutesss
secondsSSS
millisecondsa
meridian (am, pm)A
meridian (AM, PM)
import { Jalali } from 'jalali-ts';
Jalali.now().format('YYYY/MM/DD hh:mm:ss A');
Parse date
To parse a jalali date you should follow year month date [hours minutes seconds ms]
pattern:
import { Jalali } from 'jalali-ts';
const jalali = Jalali.parse('1398/12/04');
jalali.valueOf(); // 1582403400000
jalali.gregorian(); // 2020-02-23 00:00:00
jalali.toString(); // 1398/12/04 00:00:00
jalali.isLeapYear(); // false
jalali.monthLength(); // 29
jalali.add(2, 'month').add(1, 'week'); // 1399/02/11 00:00:00
jalali.startOf('week'); // 1399/02/06 00:00:00
jalali.dayOfYear(); // 37
jalali.endOf('year'); // 1399/12/30 23:59:59
jalali.isLeapYear(); // true
jalali.add(1, 'day').startOf('day'); // 1400/01/01 00:00:00
const dateTime = Jalali.parse('1398/12/04 02:30:07:05 PM');
dateTime.valueOf(); // 1582455607050
dateTime.getHours(); // 14
dateTime.getMinutes(); // 30
dateTime.getSeconds(); // 7
dateTime.getMilliseconds(); // 50
dateTime.gregorian('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss.SSS'); // 2020-02-23 14:30:07.050
const dateTimeNoMilliseconds = Jalali.parse('1398/12/04 02:30:07:05 PM', false);
dateTimeNoMilliseconds.valueOf(); // 1582455607000
dateTimeNoMilliseconds.getMilliseconds(); // 0
dateTimeNoMilliseconds.gregorian('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss.SSS'); // 2020-02-23 14:30:07.000
Time Zone
If you rely on timestamp please make sure your environment time zone is correct:
process.env.TZ = 'UTC'; // The default time zone for servers!
+Jalali.parse('1399-02-02 08:30:00 PM'); // 1587501000000
process.env.TZ = 'Asia/Tehran';
+Jalali.parse('1399-02-02 08:30:00 PM'); // 1587484800000
As you can see there is 16200000
ms offset (UTC+04:30
) for a same datetime string!
jalali-ts
checks your system time zone and if it's not equal to Jalali.defaultTimeZone = 'Asia/Tehran'
it will print a warning about it.
To disable time zone check:
Jalali.checkTimeZone = false;
If you want to change time zone value:
Jalali.timeZone = 'Asia/Kabul';
Note
If running env is nodeJalali.timeZone = 'value'
Will change system time zone!
If you don't wantjalali-ts
touch your system time zone (node process):Jalali.setTimeZone = false;