get next week start and end using jquery and moment js get next week start and end using jquery and moment js jquery jquery

get next week start and end using jquery and moment js


A little late to the party but here is the simplest way I've found to express starts/ends of weeks. The isoWeek argument starts weeks on Monday according to the ISO 8601, while week starts weeks depending on your locale (so probably either Sunday or Monday).

This week:

moment().startOf('isoWeek')moment().endOf('isoWeek')

Next week:

moment().add(1, 'weeks').startOf('isoWeek')moment().add(1, 'weeks').endOf('isoWeek')

Last week:

moment().subtract(1, 'weeks').startOf('isoWeek')moment().subtract(1, 'weeks').endOf('isoWeek')

I like these constructions because they are incredibly readable. It's also easy to go back or forward any number of weeks by specifying how many weeks you want in subtract or add.


I used moment js for this ... u can get it from here

     /*     all functions return moment() object.. <br>     GetNextWeekStart().format('DD/MM/YYYY') to get 24/02/2014     */     function GetNextWeekStart() {            var today = moment();            //edited part            var daystoMonday = 0 - (today.isoWeekday() - 1) + 7;                   var nextMonday = today.subtract('days', daystoMonday);            return nextMonday;        }        function GetNextWeekEnd() {            var nextMonday = GetNextWeekStart();            var nextSunday = nextMonday.add('days', 6);            return nextSunday;        }        function GetLastWeekStart() {            var today = moment();            var daystoLastMonday = 0 - (1 - today.isoWeekday()) + 7;            var lastMonday = today.subtract('days', daystoLastMonday);            return lastMonday;        }        function GetLastWeekEnd() {            var lastMonday = GetLastWeekStart();            var lastSunday = lastMonday.add('days', 6);            return lastSunday;         }


This is specified in the lang file, you can include the lang/en-au.js or lang/en-gb.js file and set the desired language standard. Assume you're in the UK:

moment.lang('en-gb');

If you don't want to use a custom language, you can change it for the default US locale:

moment.lang('en-custom', {    week: {        dow: 1,        doy: 6 // Adjust the first week of the year, depends on the country. For the US it's 6. For the UK, 4.    }});

Then you can do:

var date = '2014-03-24';console.log('next start', moment(date).weekday(7).format('DD/MM/YYYY')); console.log('next end', moment(date).weekday(13).format('DD/MM/YYYY')); console.log('prev start', moment(date).weekday(-7).format('DD/MM/YYYY')); console.log('prev end', moment(date).weekday(-1).format('DD/MM/YYYY')); console.log('current start', moment(date).weekday(0).format('DD/MM/YYYY')); console.log('current end', moment(date).weekday(6).format('DD/MM/YYYY')); /*next start 31/03/2014 next end 06/04/2014 prev start 17/03/2014 prev end 23/03/2014 current start 24/03/2014current end 30/03/2014*/

http://jsfiddle.net/WGXxn/3/