dayjs
Luxon
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dayjs | Luxon | |
---|---|---|
97 | 30 | |
45,745 | 14,864 | |
- | 0.8% | |
6.9 | 7.6 | |
1 day ago | 25 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dayjs
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The Day.js Dilemma: How Should We Handle OSS Maintainers Going MIA?
As web developers, we heavily rely OSS packages. One popular example is Day.js, a JS lib for parsing, validating, manipulating, and formatting dates. It's a widely-used alternative to Moment, with over 17mil weekly downloads on npm.
A critical bug was discovered in Day.js (see: https://github.com/iamkun/dayjs/pull/2118) causing incorrect date manipulation (add, subtract) when in UTC TZ. This could have severe implications for any project relying on Day.js for date-related functionality. However, the maintainer of the project appears to be unresponsive, leaving the bug unresolved and the future of the library uncertain.
This raises some important questions for our community:
- At what point should we consider a widely-used OSS project "abandoned" if the maintainer is unresponsive?
- Is forking the project the best solution, or should we first try to reach out to the maintainer through other channels?
- Are there established community guidelines around responsiveness expectations for widely-used OSS projects?
- What are successful examples of community-driven forks or maintenance after a maintainer stepped away?
I am very aware that many of these developers give their spare time for free for these projects, with little or no payment, and I am very thankful for all their work. This developer does get some money (a small amount?) through OpenCollective, and possibly also works for a company (in China?) that makes a UI library, which I think uses Day.js internally.
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JavaScript Libraries That You Should Know
11. DayJs
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Best date library to handle timezones in React Native?
DayJS has issues with its timezone plugin not compatible with Hermes engine https://github.com/iamkun/dayjs/issues/1942
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Everything you need to know about Date in Programming
Date.js
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Complete Tutorial: React Admin Panel with refine and daisyUI
We have to install refine's support packages for React Table and React Hook Form. We are using Tailwind Heroicons for our icons, the Day.js library for time calculations and Recharts library to plot our charts for KPI data. So, run the following and we are good to go:
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Managify: Manage Your Teams Easily
DayJS is a lightweight and fast JavaScript library for manipulating dates and times. It offers a moment.js-like API but with a much smaller footprint.
- is there a date calculate script/libary ?
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What library do you use to handle dates?
I use Day.js in my projects.
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Flash News App React Native (Expo^)
well, I haven't reviewed the code, I just checked package.json and I'll suggest you to ditch moment.js Even the creator recommends ditching it. dayjs is a fantastic alternative.
- How to show "Today/Tomorrow" or date using javascript?
Luxon
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A bug which is only a bug five days out of the year
To be honest, use a library where someone else figured out the ambiguities and accounted for the edge cases. Good starting point: https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/math
Date-fns is fine for simpler use cases but Luxon is a lot more complete, especially where it comes to time zones.
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Top 10 react packages for SaaS platforms
8. Luxon: Mastering Time and Timezones for Precision Data Handling
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What library do you use to handle dates?
In past i used Moment, but I read that we should avoid to use it for future projects. I read someone suggested to use Datejs, but it doesn't seems to be updated, last time was 8 years ago. Currently I'm thinking to use Luxon but I someone suggest Date-fns also.
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Googling be like
Pain
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Thoughts on the new Temporal Date API in Javascript??
I haven't seen this before, but I currently use Luxon most of the time and it makes working with dates and times a lot less painful.
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23 of the best Eleventy Themes (Starters) for 2023
Eleventyone’s project scaffold includes: Eleventy with a skeleton site, a date format filter for Nunjucks based on Luxon, a tiny CSS pipeline with PostCSS, an equally tiny inline JS pipeline, JS search index generator, Netlify Dev for testing Netlify redirects, and a serverless (FaaS) development pipeline with Netlify Dev and Netlify Functions.
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Effortlessly handle dates and times in JavaScript with Luxon
Luxon is a powerful and lightweight JavaScript library for working with dates and times. It was created as an alternative to the popular Moment.js library, with the goal of being faster, smaller, and easier to use.
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Luxon Timezones and JS-Date interop
If you ever wondered how luxon and native JS-Dates (with TimeZones) behave when converting them between each other and ISO-Date-Strings here are my tests:
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Day.js Fast 2kB alternative to Moment.js with the same modern API
But how does this compare to Luxon? (https://moment.github.io/luxon/#/why)
- converting seconds to human readable form
What are some alternatives?
date-fns - ⏳ Modern JavaScript date utility library ⌛️
moment - Parse, validate, manipulate, and display dates in javascript.
moment-timezone - Timezone support for moment.js
countdown.js - Super simple countdowns.
js-joda - :clock2: Immutable date and time library for javascript
proposal-temporal - Provides standard objects and functions for working with dates and times.
Mongoose - MongoDB object modeling designed to work in an asynchronous environment.