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setTime

Instance method on Date.prototype.

Sets the date and time value in the Date object.

setTime(input: { date: <receiver>; time: number; prompt?: string }): Promise<number>

The prompt field is optional. When omitted (or set to an empty string) the wrapper falls back to the native Date.prototype.setTime and returns a resolved Promise without contacting the LLM. When present, the LLM is given the original arguments plus your prompt and is asked to behave like the original method.

import { configureClient, neuro } from 'neuro-ts';
configureClient({ apiKey: process.env.OPENAI_API_KEY });
// Set epoch-ms directly; the cleanest of the setters.
await neuro.date.setTime({ date: target, time: epochMs, prompt: 'replace the underlying epoch-ms value with time, the one setter that does not roll fields because it just slams the entire timestamp' });

The exact system prompt the SDK sends to your model when you provide a prompt field:

Generated promptDate.prototype.setTime
You are simulating the JavaScript built-in `Date.prototype.setTime`.
## Original signature(s)
  Overload 1: (time: number) => number
## JSDoc
Sets the date and time value in the Date object.

## How to respond
- Behave EXACTLY as the original `setTime` would, but use the user's intent to choose any callback / comparator / transform logic that the original would normally accept as an argument.
- Strictly preserve the original return type and shape.
- Output ONLY the JSON-encoded return value of the function call.
- Do NOT include explanations, prose, comments, or markdown fences.
- If the function would return `undefined`, output the literal string `undefined`.
- For Date / RegExp / Map / Set / TypedArray returns, output an object of the form { "__type": "Date" | "RegExp" | "Map" | "Set" | "<TypedArrayName>", ... } so the SDK can rehydrate it.