Temporal.PlainDateTime.prototype.eraYear
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 eraYear accessor property of Temporal.PlainDateTime instances returns a non-negative integer representing the year of this date within the era, or undefined if the calendar does not use eras (e.g., ISO 8601). The year index usually starts from 1 (more common) or 0, and years in an era can decrease with time (e.g., Gregorian BCE). era and eraYear together uniquely identify a year in a calendar, in the same way that year does. It is calendar-dependent.
The set accessor of eraYear is undefined. You cannot change this property directly. Use the with() method to create a new Temporal.PlainDateTime object with the desired new value.
For general information and more examples, see Temporal.PlainDate.prototype.eraYear.
Examples
>Using eraYear
const dt = Temporal.PlainDateTime.from("2021-07-01"); // ISO 8601 calendar
console.log(dt.eraYear); // undefined
const dt2 = Temporal.PlainDateTime.from("2021-07-01[u-ca=gregory]");
console.log(dt2.eraYear); // 2021
const dt3 = Temporal.PlainDateTime.from("-002021-07-01[u-ca=gregory]");
console.log(dt3.eraYear); // 2022; 0000 is used for the year 1 BC
const dt4 = Temporal.PlainDateTime.from("2021-07-01[u-ca=japanese]");
console.log(dt4.eraYear); // 3
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| Temporal> # sec-get-temporal.plaindatetime.prototype.erayear> |
Browser compatibility
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