The toISOString() method returns a string in simplified extended ISO format (ISO 8601), which is always 24 characters long: YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ. The timezone is always zero UTC offset, as denoted by the suffix "Z".
dateObj.toISOString()
toISOString()var today = new Date('05 October 2011 14:48 UTC');
console.log(today.toISOString()); // Returns 2011-10-05T14:48:00.000Z
The above example uses parsing of a non–standard string value that may not be correctly parsed in non–Mozilla browsers.
This method was standardized in ECMA-262 5th edition. Engines which have not been updated to support this method can work around the absence of this method using the following shim:
if (!dateObj.toISOString) {
(function() {
function pad(number) {
if (number < 10) {
return '0' + number;
}
return number;
}
dateObj.toISOString = function() {
return this.getUTCFullYear() +
'-' + pad(this.getUTCMonth() + 1) +
'-' + pad(this.getUTCDate()) +
'T' + pad(this.getUTCHours()) +
':' + pad(this.getUTCMinutes()) +
':' + pad(this.getUTCSeconds()) +
'.' + (this.getUTCMilliseconds() / 1000).toFixed(3).slice(2, 5) +
'Z';
};
}());
}
Created by Mozilla Contributors, license: CC-BY-SA 2.5