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JavaScriptdate.toJSON() method converts the given date object’s contents into a string. The date object is created using the date() constructor.
dateObj.toJSON()This method does not accept any parameter. It is just used along with a Date object created using the Date() constructor.
It returns the converted string of Date() constructor contents.
Note: The DateObj is a valid Date object created using the Date() constructor whose contents are converted into a string.
Example 1: This example shows the use of JavaScript Date toJSON() Method.
Output:
1996-10-15T00:05:32.000ZExample 2: Here nothing as a parameter is passed while creating a date object but still toJSON() method returns the current day name, month name, date, year, and time.
Output:
2018-04-23T11:24:14.955ZExample 3: When some random list of values is passed, then the toJSON() method returns the corresponding produced string. The format for the Date() constructor is like Date(month, date, year, time). By following this format some values is given in the below program and the corresponding string is produced as output. The time format should be like (number:number: number).
Output:
2000-12-31T18:30:00.000Z
2001-02-02T18:30:00.000Z
2006-04-04T18:30:00.000Z
2006-04-05T05:30:12.000Z
2004-12-04T18:30:00.000Z
Note: Months, Dates, hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds must be in their respective range of 0 to 11 for months, 1 to 31 for dates, 0 to 23 for hours, 0 to 59 for minutes, 0 to 59 seconds, 0 to 999 for milliseconds otherwise toJSON() method return null.
Example 4: Here date is given as of 45 which is out of range of the date that is why the below code gives the output as null.
Output:
nullThe toJSON() method returns a string representation of the Date object in ISO format (UTC time).
You use it by calling the method on a Date object:
let jsonString = new Date().toJSON();
It returns a string in the format "YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ", where:
- YYYY is the four-digit year,
- MM is the two-digit month (01 to 12),
- DD is the two-digit day of the month (01 to 31),
- THH:mm:ss.sss is the time in hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds,
- Z represents UTC (Coordinated Universal Time).
Yes, toJSON() is often used to convert a Date object to a format suitable for JSON serialization.
Yes, toJSON() returns the date and time in UTC format (Z indicates UTC), regardless of the local time zone where the code is executed.
We have a complete list of Javascript Date Objects, to check those please go through this article.