I have a page that is currently using the datetime microformat to display a timestamp, but I have only been showing the human-readable time for my own time zone:
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Here is code of mine that parses an ISO timestamp:
function isoDateStringToDate (datestr) {
if (! this.re) {
// The date in YYYY-MM-DD or YYYYMMDD format
var datere = "(\\d{4})-?(\\d{2})-?(\\d{2})";
// The time in HH:MM:SS[.uuuu] or HHMMSS[.uuuu] format
var timere = "(\\d{2}):?(\\d{2}):?(\\d{2}(?:\\.\\d+)?)";
// The timezone as Z or in +HH[:MM] or -HH[:MM] format
var tzre = "(Z|(?:\\+|-)\\d{2}(?:\\:\\d{2})?)?";
this.re = new RegExp("^" + datere + "[ T]" + timere + tzre + "$");
}
var matches = this.re.exec(datestr);
if (! matches)
return null;
var year = matches[1];
var month = matches[2] - 1;
var day = matches[3];
var hour = matches[4];
var minute = matches[5];
var second = Math.floor(matches[6]);
var ms = matches[6] - second;
var tz = matches[7];
var ms = 0;
var offset = 0;
if (tz && tz != "Z") {
var tzmatches = tz.match(/^(\+|-)(\d{2})(\:(\d{2}))$/);
if (tzmatches) {
offset = Number(tzmatches[2]) * 60 + Number(tzmatches[4]);
if (tzmatches[1] == "-")
offset = -offset;
}
}
offset *= 60 * 1000;
var dateval = Date.UTC(year, month, day, hour, minute, second, ms) - offset;
return new Date(dateval);
}
Unfortunately, it doesn't handle timezone abbreviations either. You would have to modify the "tzre" expression to accept letters, and the only solution I know of to deal with timezone abbreviations in Javascript is to have a look-up table which you keep up to date manually in the event of changes to regional daylight savings times.