Temporal.Instant.prototype.toString()
Limited availability
This feature is not Baseline because it does not work in some of the most widely-used browsers.
Experimental: This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The toString() method of Temporal.Instant instances returns a string representing this instant in the RFC 9557 format using the specified time zone.
Syntax
toString()
toString(options)
Parameters
optionsOptional-
An object containing some or all of the following properties (in the order they are retrieved and validated):
fractionalSecondDigitsOptional-
Either an integer from 0 to 9, or the string
"auto". The default is"auto". If"auto", then trailing zeros are removed from the fractional seconds. Otherwise, the fractional part of the second component contains this many digits, padded with zeros or rounded as necessary. roundingModeOptional-
A string specifying how to round off fractional second digits beyond
fractionalSecondDigits. SeeIntl.NumberFormat(). Defaults to"trunc". smallestUnitOptional-
A string specifying the smallest unit to include in the output. Possible values are
"minute","second","millisecond","microsecond", and"nanosecond", or their plural forms, which (except"minute") are equivalent tofractionalSecondDigitsvalues of0,3,6,9, respectively. If specified, thenfractionalSecondDigitsis ignored. timeZoneOptional-
Either a string or a
Temporal.ZonedDateTimeinstance representing the time zone to use. If aTemporal.ZonedDateTimeinstance, its time zone is used. If a string, it can be a named time zone identifier, an offset time zone identifier, or a date-time string containing a time zone identifier or an offset (see time zones and offsets for more information). Defaults to"UTC".
Return value
A string in the RFC 9557 format representing this instant using the specified time zone. No annotations, such as time zone names, are included.
Exceptions
RangeError-
Thrown if any of the options is invalid.
Examples
>Using toString()
const instant = Temporal.Instant.fromEpochMilliseconds(1627814412345);
console.log(instant.toString()); // '2021-08-01T10:40:12.345Z'
// Stringification implicitly calls toString()
console.log(`${instant}`); // '2021-08-01T10:40:12.345Z'
Using options
const instant = Temporal.Instant.fromEpochMilliseconds(1627814412345);
console.log(instant.toString({ fractionalSecondDigits: 1 })); // '2021-08-01T10:40:12.3Z'
console.log(instant.toString({ smallestUnit: "minute" })); // '2021-08-01T10:40Z'
console.log(instant.toString({ timeZone: "America/New_York" })); // '2021-08-01T06:40:12.345-04:00'
// The time zone name automatically resolves to the correct offset
// based on the instant; for example, America/New_York is UTC-4 in summer,
// but UTC-5 in winter.
const instant2 = Temporal.Instant.fromEpochMilliseconds(1577836800000);
console.log(instant2.toString({ timeZone: "UTC" })); // '2029-12-31T23:00:00Z'
console.log(instant2.toString({ timeZone: "America/New_York" })); // '2019-12-31T19:00:00-05:00'
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| Temporal> # sec-temporal.instant.prototype.tostring> |
Browser compatibility
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