Microsoft® JScript® setUTCHours Method |
Language Reference Version 3 |
Sets the hours value in the Date object using Universal Coordinated Time (UTC).
objDate.setUTCHours(numHours[, numMin[, numSec[, numMilli]]])The setUTCHours method syntax has these parts:
Part Description numHours Required. A numeric value equal to the hours value. numMin Optional. A numeric value equal to the minutes value. Must be supplied if either numSec or numMilli are used. numSec Optional. A numeric value equal to the seconds value. Must be supplied if numMilli argument is used. numMilli Optional. A numeric value equal to the milliseconds value.
All set methods taking optional arguments use the value returned from corresponding get methods, if you do not specify an optional argument. For example, if the numMonth argument is optional, but not specified, JScript uses the value returned from the getMonth method.To set the hours value using local time, use the setHours method.
If the value of an argument is greater than its range or is a negative number, other stored values are modified accordingly. For example, if the stored date is "Jan 5, 1996 00:00:00.00", and setUTCHours(30) is called, the date is changed to "Jan 6, 1996 06:00:00.00."
The following example illustrates the use of the setUTCHours method:
function SetUTCHoursDemo(nhr, nmin, nsec) { var d, s; var sep = ":"; d = new Date(); d.setUTCHours(nhr, nmin, nsec); s = "Current setting is " + d.toUTCString() return(s); }