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I'm trying to use an ASP.NET RangeValidator to validate a date on a textbox. The format of the date entered on the textbox is dd MMMM yyyy.

How can I use the range validator to validate a valid date? If I enter 1 January 1000 as the min or max value I get an error saying value cannot be converted to type date, but if I use another format it picks up my entered text as invalid.

Below is my code:

<asp:TextBox 
    runat="server" 
    ID="txtDatecompleted" 
/>
<cc2:CalendarExtender
    ID="datecompletedExtender" 
    runat="server"
    TargetControlID="txtDatecompleted"
    Format="dd MMMM yyyy"
/>  
<asp:RangeValidator 
    runat="server" 
    ID="RangeValidator1" 
    Type="Date" 
    ControlToValidate="txtDatecompleted" 
    MaximumValue="9999/12/28" 
    MinimumValue="1000/12/28" 
    ErrorMessage="enter valid date" 
    Display="None"
/>
<cc2:ValidatorCalloutExtender 
    ID="RangeValidator1_ValidatorCalloutExtender" 
    runat="server"
    Enabled="True"
    TargetControlID="RangeValidator1">
</cc2:ValidatorCalloutExtender>
share|improve this question
Are you trying to validate the format? because I'm not understanding your problem? – TStamper Jun 2 '09 at 14:20

4 Answers

Best option would be

Add a compare validator to the web form. Set its controlToValidate. Set its Type property to Date. Set its operator property to DataTypeCheck eg:

<asp:CompareValidator
    id="dateValidator" runat="server" 
    Type="Date"
    Operator="DataTypeCheck"
    ControlToValidate="txtDatecompleted" 
    ErrorMessage="Please enter a valid date.">
</asp:CompareValidator>
share|improve this answer
1  
Simple and elegant. Plus the built in controls also check for valid/invalid leap year dates. 2/29/2011 says invalid but 2/29/2012 comes back valid. No need to hassle with fancy regular expressions! – Dillie-O Jan 25 '12 at 20:19
2  
@Shoban - What about if my date format is 'DD/MM/YYYY'? – Ryan Sammut Jul 19 '12 at 12:35
   
@Ryan Sammut I also want to know the answer to this question. The Date type CompareValidator accepts MM/DD/YY. I want to exclude the 2-digit year value. – danyim Sep 24 '12 at 15:53
Just a note that the CompareValidator is culture dependent, so if you would like another dateformat (e.g. dd-mm-yyyy) just set the culture accordinaly – Richard May 31 at 8:36

A CustomValidator would also work here:

<asp:CustomValidator runat="server"
    ID="valDateRange" 
    ControlToValidate="txtDatecompleted"
    onservervalidate="valDateRange_ServerValidate" 
    ErrorMessage="enter valid date" />

Code-behind:

protected void valDateRange_ServerValidate(object source, ServerValidateEventArgs args)
{
    DateTime minDate = DateTime.Parse("1000/12/28");
    DateTime maxDate = DateTime.Parse("9999/12/28");
    DateTime dt;

    args.IsValid = (DateTime.TryParse(args.Value, out dt) 
                    && dt <= maxDate 
                    && dt >= minDate);
}
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I tried your method but it failed within an update panel. Pls chk: stackoverflow.com/questions/2071585/… – yoosafinpace Jan 16 at 14:55

I believe that the dates have to be specified in the current culture of the application. You might want to experiment with setting CultureInvariantValues to true and see if that solves your problem. Otherwise you may need to change the DateTimeFormat for the current culture (or the culture itself) to get what you want.

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I think the following is the easiest way to do it.

<asp:TextBox ID="DateControl" runat="server" Visible="False"></asp:TextBox>
<asp:RangeValidator ID ="rvDate" runat ="server" ControlToValidate="DateControl" ErrorMessage="Invalid Date" Type="Date" MinimumValue="01/01/1900" MaximumValue="01/01/2100" Display="Dynamic"></asp:RangeValidator>
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