While this tutorial has content that we believe is of great benefit to our community, we have not yet tested or edited it to ensure you have an error-free learning experience. It's on our list, and we're working on it! You can help us out by using the "report an issue" button at the bottom of the tutorial.

With it’s last release nearly a year ago, the most recent commit over 6 months ago, and hundreds of open bugs and pull requests, it’s starting to seem like Moment.js is slowing down and it’s time to shop for more actively maintained alternatives. Insert Day.js, a minimalist date and time library weighing in at 2kB that provides a mostly Moment.js-compatible API for ease of transition.

Getting Started with Day.js

To get started with Day.js in your Node.js project, simply add the dependency with either npm or yarn :

$ npm install dayjs --save # or $ yarn add dayjs

Then simply include it in your script:

const dayjs = require('dayjs');

Day.js also works in modern browsers and can be self-hosted or included by way of a CDN provider like cdnjs.

Parsing a date and time string into a Day.js object is easy and supports strings, numbers, native JavaScript Date objects as well as other Day.js objects:

let date = dayjs('2019-12-27'); date = dayjs('20191227'); date = dayjs(new Date(2019, 11, 27)); date = dayjs(day('2019-12-27'));

You can even omit the string entirely to default the Day.js object to the current date and time:

date = dayjs();

Once you’ve parsed a date and time with Day.js you can leverage the isValid() method to determine if what you passed in was actually something Day.js could parse:

dayjs('2019-12-27').isValid(); // true dayjs('tomorrow').isValid(); // false

Additionally, if you were to attempt to display a Day.js object that was fed with a date that couldn’t be parsed, the return will be Invalid Date .

The .format() method allows us to take the Day.js object and convert it into a human-readable string. It supports your common set of date and time variables, like YYYY for a full year, and MM and mm for month and minutes respectively.

For those times when you want to include additional text that you don’t want to be converted to a date or time part, you can “hug” the string with brackets [ and ] :

dayjs().format('YYYY-MM-DD [at] HH:mm:ss'); dayjs().format('HH:mm:ss [on] YYYY-MM-DD');

In a previous section we attempted to pass in the string tomorrow and it was considered an invalid date. To be able to get the date and time for tomorrow, we can start with today’s date and time, and add a day to it:

dayjs().add(1, 'day').format('YYYY-MM-DD');

In addition to adding a day , you can also add month and year and even time-based intervals like hour and minute :

dayjs().add(1, 'hour').format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss'); dayjs().add(30, 'minute').format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss'); dayjs().add(3, 'month').format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss'); dayjs().add(3, 'year').format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss');

You can even chain it to do things like add multiple intervals:

dayjs().add(1, 'hour').add(30, 'minute').format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss');

Don’t you worry, there’s a subtraction method as well:

dayjs().subtract(4, 'hour').format('YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss');

One of the more complex tasks that comes up pretty regularly in development is the comparison of dates and times. Day.js makes it easy be providing helper methods such as isBefore() and isAfter() :

const date1 = dayjs('2020-01-1'); const date2 = dayjs(); if (date1.isBefore(date2)) { console.log('Date 1 falls before date 2'); } else if (date1.isAfter(date2)) { console.log('Date 2 falls before date 1'); } else if (date1.isSame(date2)) { console.log('Date 1 and date 2 are the same'); }

Conclusion

With it’s familiar interfacing and active maintenance (even during the holidays), Day.js seems like a great alternative for Moment.js.

Give it a try on your next project, I know I will be.