--- title: experimental.addDuration() function description: > `experimental.addDuration()` adds a duration to a time value and returns the resulting time value. menu: flux_v0_ref: name: experimental.addDuration parent: experimental identifier: experimental/addDuration weight: 101 flux/v0/tags: [date/time] introduced: 0.39.0 deprecated: 0.162.0 --- `experimental.addDuration()` adds a duration to a time value and returns the resulting time value. {{% warn %}} #### Deprecated `experimental.addDuration()` is deprecated in favor of [`date.add()`](/flux/v0/stdlib/date/add/). {{% /warn %}} ##### Function type signature ```js (d: duration, to: A, ?location: {zone: string, offset: duration}) => time where A: Timeable ``` {{% caption %}} For more information, see [Function type signatures](/flux/v0/function-type-signatures/). {{% /caption %}} ## Parameters ### d ({{< req >}}) Duration to add. ### to ({{< req >}}) Time to add the duration to. ### location Location to use for the time value. Use an absolute time or a relative duration. Durations are relative to `now()`. ## Examples - [Add six hours to a timestamp](#add-six-hours-to-a-timestamp) - [Add one month to yesterday](#add-one-month-to-yesterday) - [Add six hours to a relative duration](#add-six-hours-to-a-relative-duration) ### Add six hours to a timestamp ```js import "experimental" experimental.addDuration(d: 6h, to: 2019-09-16T12:00:00Z)// Returns 2019-09-16T18:00:00.000000000Z ``` ### Add one month to yesterday A time may be represented as either an explicit timestamp or as a relative time from the current `now` time. addDuration can support either type of value. ```js import "experimental" option now = () => 2021-12-10T16:27:40Z experimental.addDuration(d: 1mo, to: -1d)// Returns 2022-01-09T16:27:40Z ``` ### Add six hours to a relative duration ```js import "experimental" option now = () => 2022-01-01T12:00:00Z experimental.addDuration(d: 6h, to: 3h)// Returns 2022-01-01T21:00:00.000000000Z ```