Date.prototype.valueOf() - JavaScript | MDN

Try it

const date1 = new Date(Date.UTC(96, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5));

console.log(date1.valueOf());
// Expected output: 823230245000

const date2 = new Date("02 Feb 1996 03:04:05 GMT");

console.log(date2.valueOf());
// Expected output: 823230245000

Syntax

Parameters

None.

Return value

A number representing the timestamp, in milliseconds, of this date. Returns NaN if the date is invalid.

Description

The valueOf() method is part of the type coercion protocol. Because Date has a [Symbol.toPrimitive]() method, that method always takes priority over valueOf() when a Date object is implicitly coerced to a number. However, Date.prototype[Symbol.toPrimitive]() still calls this.valueOf() internally.

The Date object overrides the valueOf() method of Object. Date.prototype.valueOf() returns the timestamp of the date, which is functionally equivalent to the Date.prototype.getTime() method.

Examples

Using valueOf()

js

const d = new Date(0); // 1970-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
console.log(d.valueOf()); // 0

Specifications

Specification
ECMAScript® 2027 Language Specification
# sec-date.prototype.valueof

Browser compatibility

See also

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