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Home/ Questions/Q 9018321
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 16, 20262026-06-16T04:29:46+00:00 2026-06-16T04:29:46+00:00

I have a function that converts a SQL datetime stamp into a formatted time.

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I have a function that converts a SQL datetime stamp into a formatted time. It looks good on an iOS device, but its displayed as military time on an android device. How can I get this to return the toLocaleTimeString() as not military time on an android device?

function fromDateString(str) {
    var res = str.match(/\/Date\((\d+)(?:([+-])(\d\d)(\d\d))?\)\//);
    if (res == null)
        return new Date(NaN); // or something that indicates it was not a DateString
    var time = parseInt(res[1], 10);
    if (res[2] && res[3] && res[4]) {
        var dir = res[2] == "+" ? -1 : 1,
            h = parseInt(res[3], 10),
            m = parseInt(res[4], 10);
        time += dir * (h*60+m) * 60000;
    }
    return formatdate.toLocaleTimeString();
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-16T04:29:47+00:00Added an answer on June 16, 2026 at 4:29 am

    The Date.toLocaleTimeString() function` is “implementation dependent” which means that if you want to guarantee a certain format on all devices then you must apply it yourself.

    Here’s how I would do it:

    function formatTimeString(date) {
      if ((typeof(date)!=='object') || (date.constructor!==Date)) {
        throw new Error('argument must be a Date object');
      }
      function pad(s) { return ((''+s).length < 2 ? '0' : '') + s; }
      function fixHour(h) { return (h==0?'12':(h>12?h-12:h)); }
      var h=date.getHours(), m=date.getMinutes(), s=date.getSeconds()
        , timeStr=[pad(fixHour(h)), pad(m), pad(s)].join(':');
      return timeStr + ' ' + (h < 12 ? 'AM' : 'PM');
    }
    
    formatTimeString(new Date());
    // => "09:19:03 AM"
    formatTimeString(new Date('2012-12-19T20:09:10-0700'));
    // => "08:09:10 PM"
    formatTimeString(new Date('2012-12-19T00:13:14-0700'));
    // => "12:13:14 AM"
    
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