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// input 28/10/2018
// input DD/MM/YYYY
export const convertToDate = (dateSting) => {
const [day, month, year] = dateSting.split("/");
return new Date(parseInt(year), parseInt(month) - 1, parseInt(day));
}
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var myDate = new Date("2013/1/16");
var str = "2013/1/16";
var strToDate = new Date(str);
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Date.parse(dateString)
//dateString is like 2020-10-10 / 2020-10-10T10:20:20
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const dateString = '2022-05-07';
const numberOfMilliSeconds = Date.parse(dateString)
console.log(new Date(date))
// Output: Thu Jan 01 1970 05:30:00 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time)
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var parts ='2014-04-03'.split('-');
// Please pay attention to the month (parts[1]); JavaScript counts months from 0:
// January - 0, February - 1, etc.
var mydate = new Date(parts[0], parts[1] - 1, parts[2]);
console.log(mydate.toDateString());
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let date = new Date("2024-02-26");
console.log(date);
// Tue Feb 26 2024 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Greenwich Mean Time)
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var ts = '1471793029764';
ts = Number(ts); // cast it to a Number
var date = new Date(ts); // works
var invalidDate = new Date('1471793029764'); // does not work. Invalid Date
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export const convertToDate = (startDate) => {
const convertToDate = new Date(startDate); // startDate = 2-2-2022;
return convertToDate;
}