How to check or validate the textbox entered date is in DD/MM/YYYY
format?
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5Please don't use DD/MM/YYYY format. There's an international standard, YYYY-MM-DD (ISO8601)– Pavel RadzivilovskyJun 9, 2010 at 11:42
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3Better yet, use a calendar control rather than a textbox.– Cylon CatJun 9, 2010 at 11:44
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16@Pavel: Try telling that to the general public, who are used to writing dates in their local format– MPritchardJun 9, 2010 at 11:48
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1@MPritch: Agree. My web app customers would send me very far if I'll ask them to write not how does the used to write but following ISO 8601– abatishchevJun 9, 2010 at 11:52
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5@Pavel: A UI should be user-focused and it's down to the developer to decide what method of input to use as a result of customer requirements. The international disparity in date formats isn't going away so we simply need to accomodate and not force users.– David NealeJun 9, 2010 at 12:13
8 Answers
Markup:
<asp:Textbox runat="server" ID="TextBox1" />
<asp:CustomValidator runat="server" ControlToValidate="TextBox1" ErrorMessage="Date was in incorrect format" OnServerValidate="CustomValidator1_ServerValidate" />
Code-behind:
protected void CustomValidator1_ServerValidate(object sender, ServerValidateEventArgs e)
{
DateTime d;
e.IsValid = DateTime.TryParseExact(e.Value, "dd/MM/yyyy", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, DateTimeStyles.None, out d);
}
if you want to allow several formats and only them, use next:
DateTime.TryParseExact(e.Value, new[] { "dd/MM/yyyy", "yyyy-MM-dd" }, CultureInfo.InvarinatCulture, DateTimeStyles.None, out d);
Another option is using a regular expression validator. The regular expression below checks for DD/MM/YYYY but of course there is no way to distinguish if something like 01 is DD or MM. Otherwise it does the trick.
<asp:TextBox ID="txtDate" runat="server"/>
<asp:RegularExpressionValidator ID="regexpName" runat="server"
ErrorMessage="This expression does not validate."
ControlToValidate="txtDate"
ValidationExpression="^(0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])[- /.](0[1-9]|1[012])[- /.](19|20)\d\d$" />
DateTime Result;
DateTimeFormatInfo info = new DateTimeFormatInfo ( );
CultureInfo culture;
culture = CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture ( "en-US" );
info.ShortDatePattern = "dd/MM/yyyy";
if ( DateTime.TryParse ( StrDate, info, DateTimeStyles.None, out Result ) )
{
return StrDate;
}
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Code-only answers are discouraged here. Please add a description of why your solution answers the question. Nov 9, 2012 at 15:01
You could use a CustomValidator to check that the entered value is within set parameters.
I.e. 13/12/2001 is valid but 12/13/2001 is invalid.
You will be better off using a calendar control, but if you want to check the date string anyway, use the following code can be used to validate that the is in DD/MM/YYYY format.
DateTime dt;
if (!DateTime.TryParse(texbox.Text, new System.Globalization.CultureInfo("en-GB"), System.Globalization.DateTimeStyles.None, dt))
{
// text is not in the correct format
}
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en-GB = British English culture settings. It uses DD/MM/YYYY format Jun 9, 2010 at 11:56
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2seems easier to specify the string format, en-GB may allow other variations as well. Jun 9, 2010 at 12:02
You can use a Custom Validator to check just about anything in text box, but it might be easier to use CompareValidator to check if the text can be converted to a date.
I found an example (in VB but easy enough to read and translate to C#) here: http://quickstarts.asp.net/QuickStartv20/aspnet/doc/validation/default.aspx
However, using some sort of date picker control might be more user friendly.
My approach would be to use a regexvalidator for a first quick test ("does it look like it could be a date") client-side. And then a CustomValidator with a serverside event that tries to perform a DateTime.Parse with my format, to rule out dates like "29 feb 2010".
Personally I don't trust the CompareValidator here, because I don't know for sure what format it uses (but that can be because I didn't investigate enough).
You can't. User some kind of datetime picker instead. Example here.
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2
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No, it can't. Unless you have some magic computer that can read peoples minds. 01/12/2010 = dd/mm/yyyy or mm/dd/yyyy? Jun 9, 2010 at 11:53
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ambiguous dates are a weakness of this approach and could lead to problems, but it's still possible to implement a validator. I agree that a date control is a better idea, but if there are requirements to have a text box and allow entry in this format then it is at least worth validating that the text forms a valid date.– SteveJun 9, 2010 at 11:59
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I guess it depends how you define validation then. If you enter mm/dd and your dd/mm validator passes the input, then I'd say your validator doesn't work. The job of validation is to return "yes/no", not "maybe/no" Jun 9, 2010 at 12:08