momentjs returns wrong day name2019 Community Moderator ElectionGet the name of an object's typeAdd days to JavaScript Dateevent.preventDefault() vs. return falseWhy does ++[[]][+[]]+[+[]] return the string “10”?What is the explanation for these bizarre JavaScript behaviours mentioned in the 'Wat' talk for CodeMash 2012?How do I return the response from an asynchronous call?MomentJS max and min return wrong valuesComparing 2 dates with momentJSAdd day to date with momentjsParsing week day range momentjs
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momentjs returns wrong day name
2019 Community Moderator ElectionGet the name of an object's typeAdd days to JavaScript Dateevent.preventDefault() vs. return falseWhy does ++[[]][+[]]+[+[]] return the string “10”?What is the explanation for these bizarre JavaScript behaviours mentioned in the 'Wat' talk for CodeMash 2012?How do I return the response from an asynchronous call?MomentJS max and min return wrong valuesComparing 2 dates with momentJSAdd day to date with momentjsParsing week day range momentjs
This returns Wednesday, but it's Thursday
console.log(moment("7-03-2019").format("dddd")); //Wednesday
7-03-2019 is Thursday but moment("7-03-2019").format("dddd")
console.log(moment().format("dddd")); //Thursday
What am I doing wrong?
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/da0t4pnx/
javascript momentjs
add a comment |
This returns Wednesday, but it's Thursday
console.log(moment("7-03-2019").format("dddd")); //Wednesday
7-03-2019 is Thursday but moment("7-03-2019").format("dddd")
console.log(moment().format("dddd")); //Thursday
What am I doing wrong?
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/da0t4pnx/
javascript momentjs
July 3, 2019 is a Wednesday,
– Yannick Y
Mar 7 at 6:37
add a comment |
This returns Wednesday, but it's Thursday
console.log(moment("7-03-2019").format("dddd")); //Wednesday
7-03-2019 is Thursday but moment("7-03-2019").format("dddd")
console.log(moment().format("dddd")); //Thursday
What am I doing wrong?
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/da0t4pnx/
javascript momentjs
This returns Wednesday, but it's Thursday
console.log(moment("7-03-2019").format("dddd")); //Wednesday
7-03-2019 is Thursday but moment("7-03-2019").format("dddd")
console.log(moment().format("dddd")); //Thursday
What am I doing wrong?
Fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/da0t4pnx/
javascript momentjs
javascript momentjs
edited Mar 7 at 6:37
Abhi
asked Mar 7 at 6:31
AbhiAbhi
47411224
47411224
July 3, 2019 is a Wednesday,
– Yannick Y
Mar 7 at 6:37
add a comment |
July 3, 2019 is a Wednesday,
– Yannick Y
Mar 7 at 6:37
July 3, 2019 is a Wednesday,
– Yannick Y
Mar 7 at 6:37
July 3, 2019 is a Wednesday,
– Yannick Y
Mar 7 at 6:37
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Moment.js is parsing the given input in "MM-DD-YYYY" format.
It would benefit if you mentioned the format with the input. Refer: https://momentjs.com/docs/#/parsing/string-format/
Example:
console.log(moment("7-03-2019", "DD-MM-YYYY").format("dddd"));
add a comment |
July 3, 2019 (07-03-2019) is a Wednesday (because the dates are in the format MM-DD-YYYY)
If you want March 7, 2019 (03-07-2019) you should do
console.log(moment("03-07-2019").format("dddd")); //Thursday
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Moment.js is parsing the given input in "MM-DD-YYYY" format.
It would benefit if you mentioned the format with the input. Refer: https://momentjs.com/docs/#/parsing/string-format/
Example:
console.log(moment("7-03-2019", "DD-MM-YYYY").format("dddd"));
add a comment |
Moment.js is parsing the given input in "MM-DD-YYYY" format.
It would benefit if you mentioned the format with the input. Refer: https://momentjs.com/docs/#/parsing/string-format/
Example:
console.log(moment("7-03-2019", "DD-MM-YYYY").format("dddd"));
add a comment |
Moment.js is parsing the given input in "MM-DD-YYYY" format.
It would benefit if you mentioned the format with the input. Refer: https://momentjs.com/docs/#/parsing/string-format/
Example:
console.log(moment("7-03-2019", "DD-MM-YYYY").format("dddd"));
Moment.js is parsing the given input in "MM-DD-YYYY" format.
It would benefit if you mentioned the format with the input. Refer: https://momentjs.com/docs/#/parsing/string-format/
Example:
console.log(moment("7-03-2019", "DD-MM-YYYY").format("dddd"));
answered Mar 7 at 6:37
RoysonRoyson
4312412
4312412
add a comment |
add a comment |
July 3, 2019 (07-03-2019) is a Wednesday (because the dates are in the format MM-DD-YYYY)
If you want March 7, 2019 (03-07-2019) you should do
console.log(moment("03-07-2019").format("dddd")); //Thursday
add a comment |
July 3, 2019 (07-03-2019) is a Wednesday (because the dates are in the format MM-DD-YYYY)
If you want March 7, 2019 (03-07-2019) you should do
console.log(moment("03-07-2019").format("dddd")); //Thursday
add a comment |
July 3, 2019 (07-03-2019) is a Wednesday (because the dates are in the format MM-DD-YYYY)
If you want March 7, 2019 (03-07-2019) you should do
console.log(moment("03-07-2019").format("dddd")); //Thursday
July 3, 2019 (07-03-2019) is a Wednesday (because the dates are in the format MM-DD-YYYY)
If you want March 7, 2019 (03-07-2019) you should do
console.log(moment("03-07-2019").format("dddd")); //Thursday
answered Mar 7 at 6:40
Yannick YYannick Y
1,8951121
1,8951121
add a comment |
add a comment |
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July 3, 2019 is a Wednesday,
– Yannick Y
Mar 7 at 6:37