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What is a culture-invariant way of constructing a string such that the Javascript Date() constructor can parse it and create the proper date object?

I have tried these format strings which don't work (using C# to generate the strings):

clientDate.ToString();
// gives: "11/05/2009 17:35:23 +00:00"

clientDate.ToString("MMM' 'dd', 'yyyy' 'h':'mm':'ss' 'tt");
// works on an English server
// but on a French server, gives: "mai 11, 2009 5:35:23"
// Javascript won't parse that.

clientDate.ToString("MM'-'dd'-'yyyy' 'HH':'mm':'ss")
// gives: 05-11-2009 17:35:23

What is the universal format??

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good question, this is a tough problem – annakata Jul 6 at 19:38
Why do you want a single string for that? – Boldewyn Jul 6 at 19:56
I need to emit a string to the browser so I can then use Javascript to localize the string, using Javascript's toLocaleString() function. However, I've had difficulty figuring out a successful, single string format that will be emitted by all my servers. – Jeff Meatball Yang Jul 6 at 21:00

1 Answer

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According to MDC:

Given a string representing a time, parse returns the time value. It accepts the IETF standard (RFC 1123 Section 5.2.14 and elsewhere) date syntax: "Mon, 25 Dec 1995 13:30:00 GMT". It understands the continental US time-zone abbreviations, but for general use, use a time-zone offset, for example, "Mon, 25 Dec 1995 13:30:00 GMT+0430" (4 hours, 30 minutes east of the Greenwich meridian). If you do not specify a time zone, the local time zone is assumed. GMT and UTC are considered equivalent.

If you can’t generate this format using english locale, try to use Date.UTC

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RFC 1123 to the rescue! Thanks Maciej! – Jeff Meatball Yang Jul 6 at 19:48

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