On Sunday, December 30, 2012, Brion Vibber wrote:
On Sat, Dec 29, 2012 at 6:41 AM, Nischay Nahata <nischayn22@gmail.comjavascript:;
wrote:
I could find a method to covert a timestamp into the user preferred timezone in the Language class; Looks like the wrong place to me. Is there any other way (think global function) to convert to the user's timezone and preferred format?
Date formatting is language-based, so the date formatting functions do indeed live in Language. It's also based on user preferences, which makes it a bit of an odd fit, but it's a legit localization thing. :)
Elsewhere in the code, timestamps are passed around in timezone-independent formats based on UTC.
Also, is there any common script to do this in JS?
With reference to bug 43365
I'm not sure if we have full localization for dates in JS...
Thankfully to the i18n team it seems to be in development now; as per comment https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38079#c5
...but you can use the browser's built-in support. You won't get the same
formatting, and it may not match the user's *time zone preference* in MediaWiki...
eg
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects...
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