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@kossnocorp kossnocorp released this 16 Sep 12:38

I have great news! First, ten years after its release, date-fns finally gets first-class time zone support.

Another great news is that there aren't many breaking changes in this release. All of them are type-related and will affect only those explicitly using internal date-fns types. Finally, it has been less than a year since the last major release, which is an improvement over the previous four years between v2 and v3. I plan on keeping the pace and minimizing breaking changes moving forward.

Read more about the release in the announcement blog post.

- Sasha @kossnocorp

Added

  • Added time zones support via @date-fns/tz's TZDate class and tz helper function. See its README for the details about the API.

  • All relevant functions now accept the context in option, which allows to specify the time zone to make the calculations in. If the function also returns a date, it will be in the specified time zone:

    import { addDays, startOfDay } from "date-fns";
    import { tz } from "@date-fns/tz";
    
    startOfDay(addDays(Date.now(), 5, { in: tz("Asia/Singapore") }));
    //=> "2024-09-16T00:00:00.000+08:00"

    In the example, addDays will get the current date and time in Singapore and add 5 days to it. startOfDay will inherit the date type and return the start of the day in Singapore.

Changed

  • The function arguments, as well as Interval's start and end, now can be of different types, allowing you to mix UTCDate, TZDate, Date, and other extensions, as well as primitives (strings and numbers).

    The functions will normalize these values, make calculations, and return the result in the same type, preventing any bugs caused by the discrepancy. If passed, the type will be inferred from the context in option or the first encountered argument object type. The Interval's start and end will be considered separately, starting from start.

    In the given example, the result will be in the TZDate as the first argument is a number, and the start takes precedence over the end.

    clamp(Date.now(), {
      start: new TZDate(start, "Asia/Singapore"),
      end: new UTCDate(),
    });
    //=> TZDate
  • BREAKING: This release contains a bunch of types changes that should not affect the library's expected usage. The changes are primarily internal and nuanced, so rather than listing them here, I recommend you run the type checker after the upgrade. If there are unfixable problems, please open an issue.

  • BREAKING: The package is now ESM-first. CommonJS is still supported, and it should not affect most users, but it might break in certain environments. If you encounter any issues, please report them.

Fixed

  • Fixed CDN build compatibility with jQuery and other tools that expose $ by properly wrapping the code in an IIFE.