deno_dayjs
Provides dayjs 1.11.5
for Deno.
Day.js is a minimalist JavaScript library that parses, validates, manipulates, and displays dates and times for modern browsers with a largely Moment.js-compatible API. If you use Moment.js, you already know how to use Day.js.
More info or API here.
Example
import dayjs from "https://deno.land/x/deno_dayjs@v0.5.0/mod.ts";
const day = dayjs().format("YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss");
console.log(day);
console.log(dayjs().startOf("date").toDate());
console.log(dayjs().startOf("date").format("YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss"));
console.log(dayjs().endOf("date").format("YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss"));
console.log(dayjs("20211027").endOf("date").format("YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss"));
Plugins
You can also get the URL from cdn yourself like:
https://esm.sh/dayjs@1.11.5/plugin/<pluginName>
.
Week of year
import dayjs from "https://deno.land/x/deno_dayjs@v0.5.0/mod.ts";
import weekOfYear from "https://deno.land/x/deno_dayjs@v0.5.0/plugin/weekOfYear.ts";
dayjs.extend(weekOfYear);
const date = dayjs(day);
console.log(date.year() + "-" + date.week());
Relative Time
import dayjs from "https://deno.land/x/deno_dayjs@v0.5.0/mod.ts";
import relativeTime from "https://deno.land/x/deno_dayjs@v0.5.0/plugin/relativeTime.ts";
dayjs.extend(relativeTime);
dayjs().from(dayjs("1990-01-01")); // in 33 years
dayjs().from(dayjs("1990-01-01"), true); // 33 years
dayjs().fromNow();
dayjs().to(dayjs("1990-01-01")); // "33 years ago"
dayjs().toNow();
UTC
import dayjs from "https://deno.land/x/deno_dayjs@v0.5.0/mod.ts";
import utc from "https://deno.land/x/deno_dayjs@v0.5.0/plugin/utc.ts";
dayjs.extend(utc);
dayjs.utc().hour(); // 10
dayjs.hour(); // 18