const unixTime = 1210981217;
const date = new Date(unixTime*1000);
console.log(date.toLocaleDateString("en-US"));
//expected: "5/16/2008"
let unixTime = 1661354615;//it is time from 1970 in seconds
let date = new Date(unixTime*1000);//convert to milliseconds as javascript store number in milliseconds
console.log(date) //Wed Aug 24 2022 21:08:35 GMT+0545 (Nepal Time)
//it will display your localtime with GMT +545 which means 5 hours 45 minutes forward from london.
console.log(date.toUTCString()) //'Wed, 24 Aug 2022 15:23:35 GMT'
new Date('2012.08.10').getTime() / 1000
let unix_timestamp = 1549312452
// Create a new JavaScript Date object based on the timestamp
// multiplied by 1000 so that the argument is in milliseconds, not seconds.
var date = new Date(unix_timestamp * 1000);
// Hours part from the timestamp
var hours = date.getHours();
// Minutes part from the timestamp
var minutes = "0" + date.getMinutes();
// Seconds part from the timestamp
var seconds = "0" + date.getSeconds();
// Will display time in 10:30:23 format
var formattedTime = hours + ':' + minutes.substr(-2) + ':' + seconds.substr(-2);
console.log(formattedTime);
Run code snippet
Math.floor(new Date('2012.08.10').getTime() / 1000)
const unixToDate = (string) => {
const unixTime = string;
const date = new Date(unixTime * 1000);
const newText = date.toLocaleDateString("en-US");
return newText
};
new Date('2012.08.10').getTime() / 1000 //secs
new Date('2012.08.10').getTime() //milliseconds
console.log(new Date(1549312452 * 1000).toISOString().slice(0, 19).replace('T', ' '));
// "2019-02-04 20:34:12"