Files
n8n-docs/docs/code-examples/javascript-functions/luxon.md
2023-07-18 15:33:16 +01:00

165 lines
8.1 KiB
Markdown

---
contentType: howto
---
# Date and time with Luxon
[Luxon](https://github.com/moment/luxon/) is a JavaScript library that makes it easier to work with date and time. For full details of how to use Luxon, refer to [Luxon's documentation](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/?id=luxon).
## Variables
n8n uses Luxon to provide two custom variables:
- `$now`: a Luxon object containing the current timestamp. Equivalent to `DateTime.now()`.
- `$today`: a Luxon object containing the current timestamp, rounded down to the day. Equivalent to `DateTime.now().set({ hour: 0, minute: 0, second: 0, millisecond: 0 })`.
Note that these variables can return different time formats when cast as a string. This is the same behavior as Luxon's `DateTime.now()`.
``` js
$now
// n8n displays <ISO formatted timestamp>
// For example 2022-03-09T14:00:25.058+00:00
"Today's date is " + $now
// n8n displays "Today's date is <unix timestamp>"
// For example "Today's date is 1646834498755"
```
## Setting the timezone in n8n
Luxon uses the n8n timezone. This value is either:
* Default: `America/New York`
* A custom timezone for your n8n instance, set using the `GENERIC_TIMEZONE` environment variable.
* A custom timezone for an individual workflow, configured in workflow settings.
## Date and time behavior in n8n
Be aware of the following:
* In a workflow, n8n converts dates and times to strings between nodes. Keep this in mind when doing arithmetic on dates and times from other nodes.
* With vanilla JavaScript, you can convert a string to a date with `new Date('2019-06-23')`. In Luxon, you must use a function explicitly stating the format, such as `DateTime.fromISO('2019-06-23')` or `DateTime.fromFormat("23-06-2019", "dd-MM-yyyy")`.
## Common tasks
This section provides examples for some common operations. More examples, and detailed guidance, are available in [Luxon's own documentation](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/?id=luxon){:target="_blank" .external-link}.
### Convert date string to Luxon
You can convert date strings and other date formats to a Luxon DateTime object. You can convert from standard formats and from arbitrary strings.
!!! note "A difference between Luxon DateTime and JavaScript Date"
With vanilla JavaScript, you can convert a string to a date with `new Date('2019-06-23')`. In Luxon, you must use a function explicitly stating the format, such as `DateTime.fromISO('2019-06-23')` or `DateTime.fromFormat("23-06-2019", "dd-MM-yyyy")`.
#### If you have a date in a supported standard technical format:
Most dates use `fromISO()`. This creates a Luxon DateTime from an ISO 8601 string. For example:
```js
let luxonDateTime = DateTime.fromISO('2019-06-23T00:00:00.00')'
```
Luxon's API documentation has more information on [fromISO](https://moment.github.io/luxon/api-docs/index.html#datetimefromiso){:target="_blank" .external-link}.
Luxon provides functions to handle conversions for a range of formats. Refer to Luxon's guide to [Parsing technical formats](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/parsing?id=parsing-technical-formats) for details.
#### If you have a date as a string that doesn't use a standard format:
Use Luxon's [Ad-hoc parsing](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/parsing?id=ad-hoc-parsing){:target="_blank" .external-link}. To do this, use the `fromFormat()` function, providing the string and a set of [tokens](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/parsing?id=table-of-tokens){:target="_blank" .external-link} that describe the format.
For example, you have n8n's founding date, 23rd June 2019, formatted as '23-06-2019'. You want to turn this into a Luxon object:
```js
let newFormat = DateTime.fromFormat("23-06-2019", "dd-MM-yyyy")
```
When using ad-hoc parsing, note Luxon's warning about [Limitations](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/parsing?id=limitations){:target="_blank" .external-link}. If you see unexpected results, try their [Debugging](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/parsing?id=debugging){:target="_blank" .external-link} guide.
### Get n days from today
Get a number of days before or after today.
For example, you want a variable containing the date seven days before the current date.
In the code editor, enter:
``` js
let sevenDaysAgo = $today.minus({days: 7})
```
On the 23rd June 2019, this returns `[Object: "2019-06-16T00:00:00.000+00:00"]`.
This example uses n8n's custom variable `$today` for convenience. It's the equivalent of `DateTime.now().set({ hour: 0, minute: 0, second: 0, millisecond: 0 }).minus({days: 7})`.
For more detailed information and examples, refer to:
* Luxon's [guide to math](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/math)
* Their API documentation on [DateTime plus](https://moment.github.io/luxon/api-docs/index.html#datetimeplus) and [DateTime minus](https://moment.github.io/luxon/api-docs/index.html#datetimeminus)
### Create human-readable dates
In [Get n days from today](#get-n-days-from-today), the example gets the date seven days before the current date, and returns it as `yyyy-mm-dd-T00:00:00.000+00:00`. To make this more readable, you can use Luxon's formatting functions.
For example, you want the field containing the date to be formatted as DD/MM/YYYY, so that on the 23rd June 2019, it returns 23/06/2019
This expression gets the date seven days before today, and converts it to the DD/MM/YYYY format.
```js
let readableSevenDaysAgo = $today.minus({days: 7}).toLocaleString()
```
You can alter the format. For example:
```js
let readableSevenDaysAgo = $today.minus({days: 7}).toLocaleString({month: 'long', day: 'numeric', year: 'numeric'})
```
On 23rd June 2019, this returns "16 June 2019".
Refer to Luxon's guide on [toLocaleString (strings for humans)](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/formatting?id=tolocalestring-strings-for-humans){:target="_blank" .external-link} for more information.
### Get the time between two dates
To get the time between two dates, use Luxon's diffs feature. This subtracts one date from another and returns a duration.
For example, get the number of months between two dates:
```js
let monthsBetweenDates = DateTime.fromISO('2019-06-23').diff(DateTime.fromISO('2019-05-23'), 'months').toObject()
```
This returns `{"months":1}`.
Refer to Luxon's [Diffs](https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/math?id=diffs) for more information.
### A longer example: How many days to Christmas?
This example brings together several Luxon features, uses JMESPath, and does some basic string manipulation.
The scenario: you want a countdown to 25th December. Every day, it should tell you the number of days remaining to Christmas. You don't want to update it for next year - it needs to seamelessly work for every year.
```js
let daysToChristmas = "There are " + $today.diff(DateTime.fromISO($today.year + '-12-25'), 'days').toObject().days.toString().substring(1) + " days to Christmas!";
```
This outputs `"There are <number of days> days to Christmas!"`. For example, on 9th March, it outputs "There are 291 days to Christmas!".
A detailed explanation of what the code does:
* `"There are "`: a string.
* `+`: used to join two strings.
* `$today.diff()`: This is similar to the example in [Get the time between two dates](#get-the-time-between-two-dates), but it uses n8n's custom `$today` variable.
* `DateTime.fromISO($today.year + '-12-25'), 'days'`: this part gets the current year using `$today.year`, turns it into an ISO string along with the month and date, and then takes the whole ISO string and converts it to a Luxon DateTime data structure. It also tells Luxon that you want the duration in days.
* `toObject()` turns the result of diff() into a more usable object. At this point, the expression returns `[Object: {"days":-<number-of-days>}]`. For example, on 9th March, `[Object: {"days":-291}]`.
* `.days` uses JMESPath syntax to retrieve just the number of days from the object. For more information on using JMESPath with n8n, refer to our [JMESpath](/code-examples/javascript-functions/jmespath/) documentation. This gives you the number of days to Christmas, as a negative number.
* `.toString().substring(1)` turns the number into a string and removes the `-`.
* `+ " days to Christmas!"`: another string, with a `+` to join it to the previous string.