Date.now related coding questions - SheCodes Athena - AI | SheCodes

Date.now related coding questions

πŸ‘©β€πŸ’» Technical question

how to get milliseconds in javascript

πŸ€– SheCodes Athena says:

Answered in 2.4 seconds

To get the current time in milliseconds in JavaScript, you can use the Date.now() method or the getTime() method of a Date object. Both will give you the number of milliseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UTC.

Here’s how to do it using both methods:

Using Date.now():

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let currentMilliseconds = Date.now(); console.log(currentMilliseconds);

Using new Date() and getTime():

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let currentMilliseconds = new Date().getTime(); console.log(currentMilliseconds);

Both of these will output the current time in milliseconds. You can try running these in your browser's console.

πŸ‘©β€πŸ’» Technical question

how to add current date to my app

πŸ€– SheCodes Athena says:

Answered in 24.07 seconds

You can use the Date.now() method provided by the Javascript Date object to get the current date and time. To add this to the app, you can either create a Date instance using new Date() and assign the returned value of Date.now() to it or pass Date.now() as an argument to the function.

As an example, you can do the following in your Javascript code:

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let currentDate = new Date(Date.now());

Now currentDate will have a Date object with the value of the current date and time. You can further manipulate this Date object to adhere to the desired format for your app.

πŸ‘©β€πŸ’» Technical question

How do I have current time displayed on webpage using javascript

πŸ€– SheCodes Athena says:

Answered in 9.67 seconds

You can use the Date.now() function to get the current time in JavaScript and display it on a webpage. This code snippet demonstrates how it can be used to display current time:

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let now = Date.now(); let timeInMs = now - Date.parse("01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 GMT"); document.body.innerHTML = new Date(timeInMs).toUTCString();

πŸ‘©β€πŸ’» Technical question

how to console log milliseconds

πŸ€– SheCodes Athena says:

Answered in 4.41 seconds

You can log the time in milliseconds using the Date.now() method in JavaScript.

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console.log(Date.now());

πŸ‘©β€πŸ’» Technical question

Log the number of milliseconds in the current time

πŸ€– SheCodes Athena says:

Answered in 2.39 seconds

You can log the number of milliseconds in the current time with the following code:

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const currentMilliseconds = Date.now(); console.log(currentMilliseconds);

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