- ES6 Tutorial
- ES6 - Home
- ES6 - Overview
- ES6 - Environment
- ES6 - Syntax
- ES6 - Variables
- ES6 - Operators
- ES6 - Decision Making
- ES6 - Loops
- ES6 - Functions
- ES6 - Events
- ES6 - Cookies
- ES6 - Page Redirect
- ES6 - Dialog Boxes
- ES6 - Void Keyword
- ES6 - Page Printing
- ES6 - Objects
- ES6 - Number
- ES6 - Boolean
- ES6 - Strings
- ES6 - Symbol
- ES6 - New String Methods
- ES6 - Arrays
- ES6 - Date
- ES6 - Math
- ES6 - RegExp
- ES6 - HTML DOM
- ES6 - Iterator
- ES6 - Collections
- ES6 - Classes
- ES6 - Maps And Sets
- ES6 - Promises
- ES6 - Modules
- ES6 - Error Handling
- ES6 - Object Extensions
- ES6 - Reflect API
- ES6 - Proxy API
- ES6 - Validations
- ES6 - Animation
- ES6 - Multimedia
- ES6 - Debugging
- ES6 - Image Map
- ES6 - Browsers
- ES7 - New Features
- ES8 - New Features
- ES9 - New Features
- ES6 Useful Resources
- ES6 - Quick Guide
- ES6 - Useful Resources
- ES6 - Discussion
ES6 - setMilliseconds() Method
JavaScript date setMilliseconds() method sets the milliseconds for a specified date according to local time.
Syntax
Date.setMilliseconds(millisecondsValue)
Parameter
millisecondsValue − A number between 0 and 999, representing the milliseconds.
If you specify a number outside the expected range, the date information in the Date object is updated accordingly. For example, if you specify 1010, the number of seconds is incremented by 1, and 10 is used for the milliseconds.
Example
var dt = new Date( "Aug 28, 2008 23:30:00" ); dt.setMilliseconds( 1010 ); console.log( dt );
Output
Thu Aug 28 2008 23:30:01 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time)
Advertisements