If we call the
method on the value that is not of a Date object, JavaScript will throw a TypeError:
()getDay
date.
is not a function.getDay
In this tutorial, we will look at what is TypeErrror: date.getDay is not a function error and how to resolve them with examples.
What is TypeError: date.getDay
is not a function error?
getDay
Let us take a simple example to demonstrate this issue
// Declare and store the data into a variable
const date= Date.now();
// Prints the UNIX epoch
console.log(date);
// get the day of the week
const output = date.getDay();
Output
1655113057893
TypeError: date.getDay is not a function
In the above example, we have declared a variable and we have stored the UNIX epoch timestamp as the integer value into it. The Date.now()
method returns the UNIX timestamp which is of type number.
In the next statement, we call the Date.prototype.
method on the value of the type number, and hence we get a TypeError: date.getDay is not a function.
()getDay
We can also check the variable type using typeof()
to confirm the datatype.
// Declare and store the data into a variable
const currDate = Date.now();
// Prints the UNIX epoch
console.log(currDate);
console.log("The type of variable is",typeof currDate)
Output
1655113670272
The type of variable is number
How to fix TypeError: date.getDay is not a function error?
The
method can only be used on the Date object and not on any other object type. Date.prototype.getDay()
There are two ways to fix this issue in JavaScript.
Solution 1: Convert the value into a Date Object
We can easily resolve the issue by converting the value into a Date object before calling the getDay()
method.
If we know the value can be converted to a valid Date object, then we can use the Date()
constructor in JavaScript that returns the Date object.
Let us take an example to resolve the issue using the
constructor.Date
()
// Declare and store the data into a variable
const currDate = Date.now();
// Prints the UNIX epoch
console.log("Unix time stamp of current date", currDate);
// Converts timestamp into Date Object
const dt = new Date(currDate)
// Print the day of the week
console.log(dt.getDay())
Output
Unix time stamp of current date 1655154305208
2
If the Date is invalid
If called with an invalid date string, or if the date to be constructed will have a UNIX timestamp less than -8,640,000,000,000,000
or greater than 8,640,000,000,000,000
milliseconds, it returns an Invalid Date and calling the getDay()
method on this will return NaN
(Not a Number).
// Declare and store the data into a variable
const currDate = "Hello World";
// Converts date like object into Date Object
const dt = new Date(currDate)
// Print the day of the week
console.log(dt.getDay())
Output
NaN
Solution 2 – Performing the type check
We can also perform a type check on the variable to check if it’s a valid date object and has it has the property of type getDay before calling the
method.getDay
()
There are 3 logical expression that we need to evaluate.
- First we need to check if the variable stores a value which of type object
- Once the first condition passes we need to check if the object is not
null
- Last we need to ensure if the object contains getDay property.
Example – Type check using if/else
// Declare and store the data into a variable
const currDate = "2022/05/18 20:30:45";
// Converts date like object into Date Object
const dt = new Date(currDate)
if (typeof dt === 'object' && dt !== null && 'getDay' in dt) {
console.log("The data type is", typeof dt)
// Print the day of the week
console.log(dt.getDay())
}
else {
console.log("Invalid Date Object")
}
Output
The data type is object
3
Conclusion
The TypeError: date.getDay is not a function occurs if we call a getDay()
method on the object that is not of type Date object. We can resolve the issue by converting the value into Date Object using Date()
constructor before calling the getDay()
method or by performing a type check using typeof
to see if the object is of type getDay
.