Lightweight time zone listing and date converting. Intended for adding time zone support to high-level date libraries, but also for direct application usage.
- Tiny code base - 4.6 KB minified, 1.7 KB gzipped. Do not pack unnecessary weight in your application.
- Packed time zone data - 924 KB minified, 33.6 KB gzipped. Single time zones are unpacked on demand.
- Smaller bundles of code with limited data - 1900-2050 (206 kB minified, 25.4 kB gzipped), 1970-2038 (141 kB minified, 15.8 kB gzipped) and 2012-2022 (31.3 KB minified, 8.25 kB gzipped).
- Generated from the official time zone database version 2022f. Canonical time zone names, aliases, UTC offsets, and daylight-saving time changes.
- ESM, UMD and CJS module formats provided.
- Minimal interface for time zone lookup and conversions. Parsing, formatting and manipulating dates is usually the task for a higher-level date library.
Attention: exported identifiers in vanilla browser modules changed in the version 2.0.0. See the migration guide for more information.
- Synopsis
- Installation and Getting Started
- Usage Scenarios
- Design Concepts
- API Reference
- Library Integrations
- Contributing
- Release History
- License
const {
listTimeZones, findTimeZone, getZonedTime, getUnixTime
} = require('timezone-support')
// List canonical time zone names: [ 'Africa/Abidjan', ... ]
const timeZones = listTimeZones()
// Find a particular time zone: { name: 'Europe/Berlin', ... }
const berlin = findTimeZone('Europe/Berlin')
// Convert a date to a specific time zone: { year, month, day, dayOfWeek,
// hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds, epoch, zone: { abbreviation, offset } }
const nativeDate = new Date()
const berlinTime = getZonedTime(nativeDate, berlin)
// Convert a time from a specific time zone: native Date object
const berlinTime = { year: 2018, month: 9, day: 2, hours: 10, minutes: 0 }
const nativeDate = new Date(getUnixTime(berlinTime, berlin))
This module can be installed in your project using NPM, PNPM or Yarn. Make sure, that you use Node.js version 14.8 or newer.
$ npm i timezone-support
$ pnpm i timezone-support
$ yarn add timezone-support
Functions are exposed as named exports from the package modules, for example:
const { findTimeZone, getZonedTime } = require('timezone-support')
You can read more about the module loading in other environments, like with ES6 or in web browsers. Usage scenarios demonstrate applications of this library in typical real-world scenarios. Design concepts explain the approach to time zone handling taken by tni library and types of values used ion the interface. Generating custom time zone data will allow you to save the overall package size by limiting the supported year span. Finally, the API reference lists all functions with a description of their functionality.
You can see complete sample applications too, which can help you start with integration of this library.
- Day.js - timeZone plugin supplies parsing from and formatting to an arbitrary time zone
-
date-fns - date-fns-timezone provides functions for parsing from and formatting to an arbitrary time zone and time zone conversions for the native
Date
object.
In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using Grunt.
Copyright (c) 2018-2022 Ferdinand Prantl
Licensed under the MIT license.