Why does javascript replace only first instance when using replace?

Unlike the C#/.NET class library (and most other sensible languages), when you pass a String in as the string-to-match argument to the string.replace method, it doesn't do a string replace. It converts the string to a RegExp and does a regex substitution. As Gumbo explains, a regex substitution requires the g‍lobal flag, which is not on by default, to replace all matches in one go.

If you want a real string-based replace — for example because the match-string is dynamic and might contain characters that have a special meaning in regexen — the JavaScript idiom for that is:

var id= 'c_'+date.split('/').join('');

You can use:

String.prototype.replaceAll = function(search, replace) {
if (replace === undefined) {
    return this.toString();
}
return this.split(search).join(replace);
}

You need to set the g flag to replace globally:

date.replace(new RegExp("/", "g"), '')
// or
date.replace(/\//g, '')

Otherwise only the first occurrence will be replaced.