How to calculate the number of days between two dates?

JavascriptHtmlDate

Javascript Problem Overview


  1. I am calculating the number of days between the 'from' and 'to' date. For example, if the from date is 13/04/2010 and the to date is 15/04/2010 the result should be

  2. How do I get the result using JavaScript?

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

const oneDay = 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000;	// hours*minutes*seconds*milliseconds
const firstDate = new Date(2008, 1, 12);
const secondDate = new Date(2008, 1, 22);

const diffDays = Math.round(Math.abs((firstDate - secondDate) / oneDay));

Solution 2 - Javascript

Here is a function that does this:

function days_between(date1, date2) {

    // The number of milliseconds in one day
    const ONE_DAY = 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24;

    // Calculate the difference in milliseconds
    const differenceMs = Math.abs(date1 - date2);
    
    // Convert back to days and return
    return Math.round(differenceMs / ONE_DAY);

}

Solution 3 - Javascript

Here's what I use. If you just subtract the dates, it won't work across the Daylight Savings Time Boundary (eg April 1 to April 30 or Oct 1 to Oct 31). This drops all the hours to make sure you get a day and eliminates any DST problem by using UTC.

var nDays = (    Date.UTC(EndDate.getFullYear(), EndDate.getMonth(), EndDate.getDate()) -
                 Date.UTC(StartDate.getFullYear(), StartDate.getMonth(), StartDate.getDate())) / 86400000;

as a function:

function DaysBetween(StartDate, EndDate) {
  // The number of milliseconds in all UTC days (no DST)
  const oneDay = 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24;

  // A day in UTC always lasts 24 hours (unlike in other time formats)
  const start = Date.UTC(EndDate.getFullYear(), EndDate.getMonth(), EndDate.getDate());
  const end = Date.UTC(StartDate.getFullYear(), StartDate.getMonth(), StartDate.getDate());

  // so it's safe to divide by 24 hours
  return (start - end) / oneDay;
}

Solution 4 - Javascript

Here is my implementation:

function daysBetween(one, another) {
  return Math.round(Math.abs((+one) - (+another))/8.64e7);
}

+<date> does the type coercion to the integer representation and has the same effect as <date>.getTime() and 8.64e7 is the number of milliseconds in a day.

Solution 5 - Javascript

Adjusted to allow for daylight saving differences. try this:

  function daysBetween(date1, date2) {
 
 // adjust diff for for daylight savings
 var hoursToAdjust = Math.abs(date1.getTimezoneOffset() /60) - Math.abs(date2.getTimezoneOffset() /60);
 // apply the tz offset
 date2.addHours(hoursToAdjust); 
 
    // The number of milliseconds in one day
    var ONE_DAY = 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24

    // Convert both dates to milliseconds
    var date1_ms = date1.getTime()
    var date2_ms = date2.getTime()

    // Calculate the difference in milliseconds
    var difference_ms = Math.abs(date1_ms - date2_ms)

    // Convert back to days and return
    return Math.round(difference_ms/ONE_DAY)

}

// you'll want this addHours function too 

Date.prototype.addHours= function(h){
    this.setHours(this.getHours()+h);
    return this;
}

Solution 6 - Javascript

I have written this solution for another post who asked, how to calculate the difference between two dates, so I share what I have prepared:

// Here are the two dates to compare
var date1 = '2011-12-24';
var date2 = '2012-01-01';

// First we split the values to arrays date1[0] is the year, [1] the month and [2] the day
date1 = date1.split('-');
date2 = date2.split('-');

// Now we convert the array to a Date object, which has several helpful methods
date1 = new Date(date1[0], date1[1], date1[2]);
date2 = new Date(date2[0], date2[1], date2[2]);

// We use the getTime() method and get the unixtime (in milliseconds, but we want seconds, therefore we divide it through 1000)
date1_unixtime = parseInt(date1.getTime() / 1000);
date2_unixtime = parseInt(date2.getTime() / 1000);

// This is the calculated difference in seconds
var timeDifference = date2_unixtime - date1_unixtime;

// in Hours
var timeDifferenceInHours = timeDifference / 60 / 60;

// and finaly, in days :)
var timeDifferenceInDays = timeDifferenceInHours  / 24;

alert(timeDifferenceInDays);

You can skip some steps in the code, I have written it so to make it easy to understand.

You'll find a running example here: http://jsfiddle.net/matKX/

Solution 7 - Javascript

From my little date difference calculator:

var startDate = new Date(2000, 1-1, 1);  // 2000-01-01
var endDate =   new Date();              // Today

// Calculate the difference of two dates in total days
function diffDays(d1, d2)
{
  var ndays;
  var tv1 = d1.valueOf();  // msec since 1970
  var tv2 = d2.valueOf();

  ndays = (tv2 - tv1) / 1000 / 86400;
  ndays = Math.round(ndays - 0.5);
  return ndays;
}

So you would call:

var nDays = diffDays(startDate, endDate);

(Full source at http://david.tribble.com/src/javascript/jstimespan.html.)

Addendum

The code can be improved by changing these lines:

  var tv1 = d1.getTime();  // msec since 1970
  var tv2 = d2.getTime();

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionudayaView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptMaxVTView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptDarin DimitrovView Answer on Stackoverflow
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Solution 7 - JavascriptDavid R TribbleView Answer on Stackoverflow