Date.now()
Publikováno: 17.1.2024
Ask any software engineer and they’ll tell you that coding date logic can be a nightmare. Developers need to consider timezones, weird date defaults, and platform-specific date formats. The easiest way to work with dates is to reduce the date to the most simple format possible — usually a timestamp. To get the immediate time […]
The post Date.now() appeared first on David Walsh Blog.
Ask any software engineer and they’ll tell you that coding date logic can be a nightmare. Developers need to consider timezones, weird date defaults, and platform-specific date formats. The easiest way to work with dates is to reduce the date to the most simple format possible — usually a timestamp. To get the immediate time in integer format, you can use Date.now
:
const now = Date.now(); // 1705190738870
I will oftentimes employ Date.now()
in my console.log
statements to differentiate likewise console.log
results from each other. You could also use that date as a unique identifier for an event in a low-traffic environment.
The post Date.now() appeared first on David Walsh Blog.