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I have a date string in format YYYYMMDD for example 20140330 In xsl 1.0 I want to convert the date string to format YYYY-MM-DD for example 2014-03-30

I tried using several date functions but it did not work. Can anyone help me to convert the date ?

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  • XSLT 1.0 doesn't have any "date functions" (the date-related functions are part of XPath 2.0), you will have to use plain string manipulation. Dec 11, 2014 at 10:53
  • Thanks for the response. I now upgraded my software to use xpath 2 and I tried using function xp20:format-dateTime('19711018','[Y0001]-[M01]-[D01]') but the function is not returning any value.. I am expecting 1971-10-18... not sure if I am missing something!!
    – jaya k
    Dec 11, 2014 at 13:35
  • "I now upgraded my software to use xpath 2" Post a new question, then. Dec 11, 2014 at 17:34

1 Answer 1

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You can use the substring function. Given the following input XML:

<root>20140330</root>

and the following stylesheet:

<xsl:stylesheet 
    xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
    version="1.0">

    <xsl:output omit-xml-declaration="yes"/>

    <xsl:template match="root">
        <xsl:value-of select="concat(substring(., 1, 4), '-', substring(., 5, 2), '-', substring(., 7, 2))"/>
    </xsl:template>

</xsl:stylesheet>

it outputs:

2014-03-30
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  • Thank you. It works . Now I am trying to use xpath function. I now upgraded my software to use xpath 2 and I tried using function xp20:format-dateTime('19711018','[Y0001]-[M01]-[D01]') but the function is not returning any value.. I am expecting 1971-10-18... not sure if I am missing something!!
    – jaya k
    Dec 11, 2014 at 13:36
  • 2
    @jayak - format-dateTime() is an XSLT 2.0 function; not XPath. The first argument must be an xs:dateTime. You're trying to format a date, not a dateTime. You should use format-date() instead. However, the first argument for format-date() is an xs:date. The string 19711018 cannot be cast to an xs:date. You'd have to use format-date(xs:date('1971-10-18'),'[Y0001]-[M01]-[D01]') which would return 1971-10-18 anyway. Might as well stick with the string manipulation only. (Since you're using 2.0 now you could do it this way: replace('19711018','(\d{4})(\d{2})(\d{2})','$1-$2-$3').) Dec 11, 2014 at 15:06

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