269
votes

I know I can do anything and some more envolving Dates with momentjs. But embarrassingly, I'm having a hard time trying to do something that seems simple: geting the difference between 2 times.

Example:

var now  = "04/09/2013 15:00:00";
var then = "04/09/2013 14:20:30";

//expected result:
"00:39:30"

what I tried:

var now = moment("04/09/2013 15:00:00");
var then = moment("04/09/2013 14:20:30");

console.log(moment(moment.duration(now.diff(then))).format("hh:mm:ss"))
//outputs 10:39:30  

I do not understand what is that "10" there. I live in Brazil, so we are utc-0300 if that is relevant.

The result of moment.duration(now.diff(then)) is a duration with the correct internal values:

 days: 0
 hours: 0
 milliseconds: 0
 minutes: 39
 months: 0
 seconds: 30
 years: 0

So, I guess my question is: how to convert a momentjs Duration to a time interval? I sure can use

duration.get("hours") +":"+ duration.get("minutes") +:+ duration.get("seconds")

but i feel that there is something more elegant that I am completely missing.

update
looking closer, in the above example now is:

Tue Apr 09 2013 15:00:00 GMT-0300 (E. South America Standard Time)…}

and moment(moment.duration(now.diff(then))) is:

Wed Dec 31 1969 22:39:30 GMT-0200 (E. South America Daylight Time)…}

I am not sure why the second value is in Daylight Time (-0200)... but I am sure that i do not like dates :(

update 2

well, the value is -0200 probably because 31/12/1969 was a date where the daylight time was being used... so thats that.

21
"but I am sure that i do not like dates" :P Did you ever read this: nodatime.org/unstable/userguide/trivia.html ?Boris Callens

21 Answers

405
votes

This approach will work ONLY when the total duration is less than 24 hours:

var now  = "04/09/2013 15:00:00";
var then = "04/09/2013 14:20:30";

moment.utc(moment(now,"DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss").diff(moment(then,"DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss"))).format("HH:mm:ss")

// outputs: "00:39:30"

If you have 24 hours or more, the hours will reset to zero with the above approach, so it is not ideal.

If you want to get a valid response for durations of 24 hours or greater, then you'll have to do something like this instead:

var now  = "04/09/2013 15:00:00";
var then = "02/09/2013 14:20:30";

var ms = moment(now,"DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss").diff(moment(then,"DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss"));
var d = moment.duration(ms);
var s = Math.floor(d.asHours()) + moment.utc(ms).format(":mm:ss");

// outputs: "48:39:30"

Note that I'm using the utc time as a shortcut. You could pull out d.minutes() and d.seconds() separately, but you would also have to zeropad them.

This is necessary because the ability to format a duration objection is not currently in moment.js. It has been requested here. However, there is a third-party plugin called moment-duration-format that is specifically for this purpose:

var now  = "04/09/2013 15:00:00";
var then = "02/09/2013 14:20:30";

var ms = moment(now,"DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss").diff(moment(then,"DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss"));
var d = moment.duration(ms);
var s = d.format("hh:mm:ss");

// outputs: "48:39:30"
74
votes

Your problem is in passing the result of moment.duration() back into moment() before formatting it; this results in moment() interpreting it as a time relative to the Unix epoch.

It doesn't give you exactly the format you're looking for, but

moment.duration(now.diff(then)).humanize()

would give you a useful format like "40 minutes". If you're really keen on that specific formatting, you'll have to build a new string yourself. A cheap way would be

[diff.asHours(), diff.minutes(), diff.seconds()].join(':')

where var diff = moment.duration(now.diff(then)). This doesn't give you the zero-padding on single digit values. For that, you might want to consider something like underscore.string - although it seems like a long way to go just for a few extra zeroes. :)

71
votes
var a = moment([2007, 0, 29]);
var b = moment([2007, 0, 28]);
a.diff(b, 'days') //[days, years, months, seconds, ...]
//Result 1 

Worked for me

See more in http://momentjs.com/docs/#/displaying/difference/

33
votes

If you want difference of two timestamp into total days,hours and minutes only, not in months and years .

var now  = "01/08/2016 15:00:00";
var then = "04/02/2016 14:20:30";
var diff = moment.duration(moment(then).diff(moment(now)));

diff contains 2 months,23 days,23 hours and 20 minutes. But we need result only in days,hours and minutes so the simple solution is:

var days = parseInt(diff.asDays()); //84

var hours = parseInt(diff.asHours()); //2039 hours, but it gives total hours in given miliseconds which is not expacted.

hours = hours - days*24;  // 23 hours

var minutes = parseInt(diff.asMinutes()); //122360 minutes,but it gives total minutes in given miliseconds which is not expacted.

minutes = minutes - (days*24*60 + hours*60); //20 minutes.

Final result will be : 84 days, 23 hours, 20 minutes.

20
votes

When you call diff, moment.js calculates the difference in milliseconds. If the milliseconds is passed to duration, it is used to calculate duration which is correct. However. when you pass the same milliseconds to the moment(), it calculates the date that is milliseconds from(after) epoch/unix time that is January 1, 1970 (midnight UTC/GMT). That is why you get 1969 as the year together with wrong hour.

duration.get("hours") +":"+ duration.get("minutes") +":"+ duration.get("seconds")

So, I think this is how you should do it since moment.js does not offer format function for duration. Or you can write a simple wrapper to make it easier/prettier.

14
votes

This should work fine.

var now  = "04/09/2013 15:00:00";
var then = "02/09/2013 14:20:30";

var ms = moment(now,"DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss").diff(moment(then,"DD/MM/YYYY HH:mm:ss"));
var d = moment.duration(ms);

console.log(d.days() + ':' + d.hours() + ':' + d.minutes() + ':' + d.seconds());
10
votes

If we want only hh:mm:ss, we can use a function like that:

//param: duration in milliseconds
MillisecondsToTime: function(duration) {
    var seconds = parseInt((duration/1000)%60)
        , minutes = parseInt((duration/(1000*60))%60)
        , hours = parseInt((duration/(1000*60*60))%24)
        , days  = parseInt(duration/(1000*60*60*24));

    var hoursDays = parseInt(days*24);
    hours += hoursDays;
    hours = (hours < 10) ? "0" + hours : hours;
    minutes = (minutes < 10) ? "0" + minutes : minutes;
    seconds = (seconds < 10) ? "0" + seconds : seconds;
    return hours + ":" + minutes + ":" + seconds;
}
5
votes

Use this,

  var duration = moment.duration(endDate.diff(startDate));

    var aa = duration.asHours();
4
votes

Instead of

Math.floor(duration.asHours()) + moment.utc(duration.asMilliseconds()).format(":mm:ss")

It's better to do

moment.utc(total.asMilliseconds()).format("HH:mm:ss");
3
votes

This will work for any date in the format YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss

const moment=require("moment");
let startDate=moment("2020-09-16 08:39:27");
const endDate=moment();


const duration=moment.duration(endDate.diff(startDate))
console.log(duration.asSeconds());
 console.log(duration.asHours());
2
votes

In ES8 using moment, now and start being moment objects.

const duration = moment.duration(now.diff(start));
const timespan = duration.get("hours").toString().padStart(2, '0') +":"+ duration.get("minutes").toString().padStart(2, '0') +":"+ duration.get("seconds").toString().padStart(2, '0');
2
votes

Typescript: following should work,

export const getTimeBetweenDates = ({
  until,
  format
}: {
  until: number;
  format: 'seconds' | 'minutes' | 'hours' | 'days';
}): number => {
  const date = new Date();
  const remainingTime = new Date(until * 1000);
  const getFrom = moment([date.getUTCFullYear(), date.getUTCMonth(), date.getUTCDate()]);
  const getUntil = moment([remainingTime.getUTCFullYear(), remainingTime.getUTCMonth(), remainingTime.getUTCDate()]);
  const diff = getUntil.diff(getFrom, format);
  return !isNaN(diff) ? diff : null;
};
1
votes

DATE TIME BASED INPUT

    var dt1 = new Date("2019-1-8 11:19:16");
    var dt2 = new Date("2019-1-8 11:24:16");


    var diff =(dt2.getTime() - dt1.getTime()) ;
    var hours = Math.floor(diff / (1000 * 60 * 60));
    diff -= hours * (1000 * 60 * 60);
    var mins = Math.floor(diff / (1000 * 60));
    diff -= mins * (1000 * 60);


    var response = {
        status : 200,
        Hour : hours,
        Mins : mins
    }

OUTPUT

{
"status": 200,
"Hour": 0,
"Mins": 5
}
0
votes

I create a simple function with typescript

const diffDuration: moment.Duration = moment.duration(moment('2017-09-04 12:55').diff(moment('2017-09-02 13:26')));
setDiffTimeString(diffDuration);

function setDiffTimeString(diffDuration: moment.Duration) {
  const str = [];
  diffDuration.years() > 0 ? str.push(`${diffDuration.years()} year(s)`) : null;
  diffDuration.months() > 0 ? str.push(`${diffDuration.months()} month(s)`) : null;
  diffDuration.days() > 0 ? str.push(`${diffDuration.days()} day(s)`) : null;
  diffDuration.hours() > 0 ? str.push(`${diffDuration.hours()} hour(s)`) : null;
  diffDuration.minutes() > 0 ? str.push(`${diffDuration.minutes()} minute(s)`) : null;
  console.log(str.join(', '));
} 
// output: 1 day(s), 23 hour(s), 29 minute(s)

for generate javascript https://www.typescriptlang.org/play/index.html

0
votes

InTime=06:38,Outtime=15:40

 calTimeDifference(){
        this.start = dailyattendance.InTime.split(":");
        this.end = dailyattendance.OutTime.split(":");
        var time1 = ((parseInt(this.start[0]) * 60) + parseInt(this.start[1]))
        var time2 = ((parseInt(this.end[0]) * 60) + parseInt(this.end[1]));
        var time3 = ((time2 - time1) / 60);
        var timeHr = parseInt(""+time3);
        var  timeMin = ((time2 - time1) % 60);
    }
0
votes

EPOCH TIME DIFFERENCE USING MOMENTJS:

To Get Difference between two epoch times:

Syntax: moment.duration(moment(moment(date1).diff(moment(date2)))).asHours()

Difference in Hours: moment.duration(moment(moment(1590597744551).diff(moment(1590597909877)))).asHours()

Difference in minutes: moment.duration(moment(moment(1590597744551).diff(moment(1590597909877)))).asMinutes().toFixed()

Note: You could remove .toFixed() if you need precise values.

Code:

const moment = require('moment')

console.log('Date 1',moment(1590597909877).toISOString())
console.log('Date 2',moment(1590597744551).toISOString())
console.log('Date1 - Date 2 time diffrence is : ',moment.duration(moment(moment(1590597909877).diff(moment(1590597744551)))).asMinutes().toFixed()+' minutes')

Refer working example here: https://repl.it/repls/MoccasinDearDimension

0
votes

To get the difference between two-moment format dates or javascript Date format indifference of minutes the most optimum solution is

const timeDiff = moment.duration((moment(apptDetails.end_date_time).diff(moment(apptDetails.date_time)))).asMinutes()

you can change the difference format as you need by just replacing the asMinutes() function

0
votes

If you want a localized number of days between two dates (startDate, endDate):

var currentLocaleData = moment.localeData("en");
var duration = moment.duration(endDate.diff(startDate));
var nbDays = Math.floor(duration.asDays()); // complete days
var nbDaysStr = currentLocaleData.relativeTime(returnVal.days, false, "dd", false);

nbDaysStr will contain something like '3 days';

See https://momentjs.com/docs/#/i18n/changing-locale/ for information on how to display the amount of hours or month, for example.

0
votes

The following approach is valid for all cases (difference between dates less than 24 hours and difference greater than 24 hours):

// Defining start and end variables
let start = moment('04/09/2013 15:00:00', 'DD/MM/YYYY hh:mm:ss');
let end   = moment('04/09/2013 14:20:30', 'DD/MM/YYYY hh:mm:ss');

// Getting the difference: hours (h), minutes (m) and seconds (s)
let h  = end.diff(start, 'hours');
let m  = end.diff(start, 'minutes') - (60 * h);
let s  = end.diff(start, 'seconds') - (60 * 60 * h) - (60 * m);

// Formating in hh:mm:ss (appends a left zero when num < 10)
let hh = ('0' + h).slice(-2);
let mm = ('0' + m).slice(-2);
let ss = ('0' + s).slice(-2);

console.log(`${hh}:${mm}:${ss}`); // 00:39:30
0
votes

It is very simple with moment below code will return diffrence in hour from current time:

moment().diff('2021-02-17T14:03:55.811000Z', "h")
0
votes

This will return biggest time period diff like (4 seconds, 2 minutes, 1 hours, 2 days, 3 weeks, 4 months, 5 years). I use this for notification recent time.

function dateDiff(startDate, endDate) {
    let arrDate = ["seconds", "minutes", "hours", "days", "weeks", "months", "years"];
    let dateMap = arrDate.map(e => moment(endDate).diff(startDate, e));
    let index = 6 - dateMap.filter(e => e == 0).length;
    return {
        type: arrDate[index] ?? "seconds",
        value: dateMap[index] ?? 0
    };
}


Example:

dateDiff("2021-06-09 01:00:00", "2021-06-09 04:01:01")

{type: "hours", value: 3}

dateDiff("2021-06-09 01:00:00", "2021-06-12 04:01:01")

{type: "days", value: 3}

dateDiff("2021-06-09 01:00:00", "2021-06-09 01:00:10")

{type: "seconds", value: 10}