JavaScript setUTCHours() Method
Example
Set the hour to 15, according to UTC time:
var d = new Date();
d.setUTCHours(15);
The result of d, local time, will be:
Try it yourself »
More "Try it Yourself" examples below.
Definition and Usage
The setUTCHours() method sets the hour of a date object, according to the UTC time.
This method can also be used to set the minutes, seconds and milliseconds.
Tip: The Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) is the time set by the World Time Standard.
Note: UTC time is the same as GMT time.
Browser Support
| Method | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| setUTCHours() | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 
Syntax
Date.setUTCHours(hour,min,sec,millisec)
Parameter Values
| Parameter | Description | 
|---|---|
| hour | Required. An integer representing the hour. Expected values are 0-23, but other values are allowed: 
 | 
| min | Optional. An integer representing the minutes. Expected values are 0-59, but other values are allowed: 
 | 
| sec | Optional. An integer representing the seconds Expected values are 0-59, but other values are allowed: 
 | 
| millisec | Optional. An integer representing the milliseconds Expected values are 0-999, but other values are allowed: 
 | 
Technical Details
| Return Value: | A Number, representing the number of milliseconds between the date object and midnight January 1 1970 | 
|---|---|
| JavaScript Version: | 1.3 | 
 
More Examples
Example
Set the time to 15:35:01 UTC time
var d = new Date();
d.setUTCHours(15, 35,1);
The result of d, local time will be:
Try it yourself »
Example
Set the time to 48 hours ago, using UTC methods:
var d = new Date();
d.setUTCHours(d.getUTCHours() - 48);
The result of d, local time, will be:
Try it yourself »
 JavaScript Date Object
 JavaScript Date Object

