159

I want to validate the date format on an input using the format mm/dd/yyyy.

I found below codes in one site and then used it but it doesn't work:

function isDate(ExpiryDate) { 
    var objDate,  // date object initialized from the ExpiryDate string 
        mSeconds, // ExpiryDate in milliseconds 
        day,      // day 
        month,    // month 
        year;     // year 
    // date length should be 10 characters (no more no less) 
    if (ExpiryDate.length !== 10) { 
        return false; 
    } 
    // third and sixth character should be '/' 
    if (ExpiryDate.substring(2, 3) !== '/' || ExpiryDate.substring(5, 6) !== '/') { 
        return false; 
    } 
    // extract month, day and year from the ExpiryDate (expected format is mm/dd/yyyy) 
    // subtraction will cast variables to integer implicitly (needed 
    // for !== comparing) 
    month = ExpiryDate.substring(0, 2) - 1; // because months in JS start from 0 
    day = ExpiryDate.substring(3, 5) - 0; 
    year = ExpiryDate.substring(6, 10) - 0; 
    // test year range 
    if (year < 1000 || year > 3000) { 
        return false; 
    } 
    // convert ExpiryDate to milliseconds 
    mSeconds = (new Date(year, month, day)).getTime(); 
    // initialize Date() object from calculated milliseconds 
    objDate = new Date(); 
    objDate.setTime(mSeconds); 
    // compare input date and parts from Date() object 
    // if difference exists then date isn't valid 
    if (objDate.getFullYear() !== year || 
        objDate.getMonth() !== month || 
        objDate.getDate() !== day) { 
        return false; 
    } 
    // otherwise return true 
    return true; 
}

function checkDate(){ 
    // define date string to test 
    var ExpiryDate = document.getElementById(' ExpiryDate').value; 
    // check date and print message 
    if (isDate(ExpiryDate)) { 
        alert('OK'); 
    } 
    else { 
        alert('Invalid date format!'); 
    } 
}

Any suggestion about what could be wrong?

4
  • 8
    Welcome to StackOverflow. You can format source code with the {} toolbar button. I've done it for you this time. Also, try to provide some information about your problem: a doesn't work description is a useful as a then fix it solution. May 30, 2011 at 15:13
  • What kind of date formats are you trying to validate? Can you give some example of dates that should be valid?
    – Niklas
    May 30, 2011 at 15:14
  • manishprajapati.in/blog/… May 23, 2017 at 6:18

23 Answers 23

243

I think Niklas has the right answer to your problem. Besides that, I think the following date validation function is a little bit easier to read:

// Validates that the input string is a valid date formatted as "mm/dd/yyyy"
function isValidDate(dateString)
{
    // First check for the pattern
    if(!/^\d{1,2}\/\d{1,2}\/\d{4}$/.test(dateString))
        return false;

    // Parse the date parts to integers
    var parts = dateString.split("/");
    var day = parseInt(parts[1], 10);
    var month = parseInt(parts[0], 10);
    var year = parseInt(parts[2], 10);

    // Check the ranges of month and year
    if(year < 1000 || year > 3000 || month == 0 || month > 12)
        return false;

    var monthLength = [ 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31 ];

    // Adjust for leap years
    if(year % 400 == 0 || (year % 100 != 0 && year % 4 == 0))
        monthLength[1] = 29;

    // Check the range of the day
    return day > 0 && day <= monthLength[month - 1];
};
8
  • 11
    Remember to use the second argument to parseInt: parseInt(parts[0], 10). Otherwise, September's 09 is read as an octal and parses to 0
    – hugomg
    May 30, 2011 at 16:52
  • 1
    A couple years down the line and this just saved me a fair bit of time, thanks for the sweet answer! Aug 9, 2013 at 10:40
  • 1
    Excellent post! Combines the regex formatting with the needed parsing for validation. Nov 1, 2013 at 20:52
  • 6
    I would suggest you change the regex to this: /^(\d{2}|\d{1})\/(\d{2}|\d{1})\/\d{4}$/ this way it catches one digit month and day 1/5/2014. Thanks for the sample! Apr 28, 2014 at 10:48
  • @MitchLabrador - Thanks for the feedback. I improved the regex based on your suggestion. Apr 28, 2014 at 12:07
154

I would use Moment.js for date validation.

alert(moment("05/22/2012", 'MM/DD/YYYY',true).isValid()); //true

Jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/q8y9nbu5/

true value is for strict parsing credit to @Andrey Prokhorov which means

you may specify a boolean for the last argument to make Moment use strict parsing. Strict parsing requires that the format and input match exactly, including delimeters.

4
  • 8
    Use "M/D/YYYY" to allow 1-2 digits for Month & Day. Feb 10, 2017 at 16:21
  • 4
    good to know that third parameter "true" stays for "use strict parsing" momentjs.com/docs/#/parsing/string-format Nov 13, 2018 at 14:40
  • 1
    @Razan Paul hope you did not mind I added little explanation for more clarity. it wise not reinvent the wheels again and again, so pual's answer is the best one in my humble opinion Feb 23, 2020 at 1:15
  • 1
    moment(dateString, 'MM/DD/YYYY', true).isValid() || moment(dateString, 'M/DD/YYYY', true).isValid() || moment(dateString, 'MM/D/YYYY', true).isValid(); May 13, 2020 at 7:22
52

Use the following regular expression to validate:

var date_regex = /^(0[1-9]|1[0-2])\/(0[1-9]|1\d|2\d|3[01])\/(19|20)\d{2}$/;
if (!(date_regex.test(testDate))) {
    return false;
}

This is working for me for MM/dd/yyyy.

10
  • 4
    How We will validate yyyy-mm-dd or invalid date like 9834-66-43 Sep 24, 2013 at 14:15
  • 11
    You can use /^[0-9]{4}-(0[1-9]|1[0-2])-(0[1-9]|[1-2][0-9]|3[0-1])$/ to validate yyyy-mm-dd.
    – Ravi Kant
    Sep 27, 2013 at 10:12
  • 2
    this is awesome, since I for one hate formulating regex and two like their efficiency!
    – jadrake
    Oct 19, 2013 at 6:09
  • 7
    What happens in the year 3000? :)
    – TheOne
    Jan 19, 2015 at 15:52
  • 7
    @TheOne..y3k problem.. :P
    – Sathesh
    Mar 30, 2016 at 23:25
37

All credits go to elian-ebbing

Just for the lazy ones here I also provide a customized version of the function for the format yyyy-mm-dd.

function isValidDate(dateString)
{
    // First check for the pattern
    var regex_date = /^\d{4}\-\d{1,2}\-\d{1,2}$/;

    if(!regex_date.test(dateString))
    {
        return false;
    }

    // Parse the date parts to integers
    var parts   = dateString.split("-");
    var day     = parseInt(parts[2], 10);
    var month   = parseInt(parts[1], 10);
    var year    = parseInt(parts[0], 10);

    // Check the ranges of month and year
    if(year < 1000 || year > 3000 || month == 0 || month > 12)
    {
        return false;
    }

    var monthLength = [ 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31 ];

    // Adjust for leap years
    if(year % 400 == 0 || (year % 100 != 0 && year % 4 == 0))
    {
        monthLength[1] = 29;
    }

    // Check the range of the day
    return day > 0 && day <= monthLength[month - 1];
}
3
  • This validates '2020-5-1' as true while the leading zero's are ignored. I made it work by first testing the pattern of the year with /^(19|20)\d\d$/, the month with /^(0[0-9]|1[0-2])$/ and the day with /^(0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])$/ before parsing. Then it worked thanks. Jun 1, 2020 at 6:25
  • Also to test the pattern of the date for exactly yyyy-mm-dd format this regex /^\d{4}\-\d{1,2}\-\d{1,2}$/ will validate yyyy-mm-dd or yyyy-m-d as true, therefore it only validates the length not each individual date part. For precise length of yyyy-mm-dd without checking that the year, month and date is correct use /^\d{4}\-\d{2}\-\d{2}$/ instead. Jun 1, 2020 at 6:44
  • The required format is mm/dd/yyyy not yyyy-m-d.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 10:13
27

It's unusual to see a post so old on such a basic topic, with so many answers, none of them right. (I'm not saying none of them work.)

  • A leap-year determination routine is not needed for this. The language can do that work for us.
  • Moment is not needed for this.
  • Date.parse() shouldn't be used for local date strings. MDN says "It is not recommended to use Date.parse as until ES5, parsing of strings was entirely implementation dependent." The standard requires a (potentially simplified) ISO 8601 string; support for any other format is implementation-dependent.
  • Nor should new Date(string) be used, because that uses Date.parse().
  • IMO the leap day should be validated.
  • The validation function must account for the possibility that the input string doesn't match the expected format. For example, '1a/2a/3aaa', '1234567890', or 'ab/cd/efgh'.

Here's an efficient, concise solution with no implicit conversions. It takes advantage of the Date constructor's willingness to interpret 2018-14-29 as 2019-03-01. It does use a couple modern language features, but those are easily removed if needed. I've also included some tests.

function isValidDate(s) {
  // Assumes s is "mm/dd/yyyy"
  if (!/^\d\d\/\d\d\/\d\d\d\d$/.test(s)) {
    return false;
  }
  const parts = s.split('/').map((p) => parseInt(p, 10));
  parts[0] -= 1;
  const d = new Date(parts[2], parts[0], parts[1]);
  return d.getMonth() === parts[0] && d.getDate() === parts[1] && d.getFullYear() === parts[2];
}

function testValidDate(s) {
  console.log(s, isValidDate(s));
}
testValidDate('01/01/2020'); // true
testValidDate('02/29/2020'); // true
testValidDate('02/29/2000'); // true
testValidDate('02/29/1900'); // false
testValidDate('02/29/2019'); // false
testValidDate('01/32/1970'); // false
testValidDate('13/01/1970'); // false
testValidDate('14/29/2018'); // false
testValidDate('1a/2b/3ccc'); // false
testValidDate('1234567890'); // false
testValidDate('aa/bb/cccc'); // false
testValidDate(null); // false
testValidDate(''); // false

1
  • 1
    Nice answer. Could improve readability using const [mm, dd, yyyy] = date.split('/').map((p) => parseInt(p)); instead of parts[x] Mar 23, 2021 at 19:42
21

You could use Date.parse()

You can read in MDN documentation

The Date.parse() method parses a string representation of a date, and returns the number of milliseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 UTC or NaN if the string is unrecognized or, in some cases, contains illegal date values (e.g. 2015-02-31).

And check if the result of Date.parse isNaN

let isValidDate = Date.parse('01/29/1980');

if (isNaN(isValidDate)) {
  // when is not valid date logic

  return false;
}

// when is valid date logic

Please take a look when is recommended to use Date.parse in MDN

4
  • 3
    Date.parse will give you a valid parse with a date such as "46/7/17"
    – LarryBud
    Mar 29, 2018 at 1:12
  • Will return true result for yyyy/02/30
    – Raimonds
    May 25, 2018 at 13:18
  • 2
    Downvoted as this will allow garbage through. e.g. Date.parse('01//////29//000')
    – shellscape
    Feb 11, 2021 at 21:01
  • The question is specifically about the mm/dd/yyyy format, not anything vaguely resembling a date that can be parsed.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 8:59
12

It appears to be working fine for mm/dd/yyyy format dates, example:

http://jsfiddle.net/niklasvh/xfrLm/

The only problem I had with your code was the fact that:

var ExpiryDate = document.getElementById(' ExpiryDate').value;

Had a space inside the brackets, before the element ID. Changed it to:

var ExpiryDate = document.getElementById('ExpiryDate').value;

Without any further details regarding the type of data that isn't working, there isn't much else to give input on.

1
  • Please post the code here. You can click edit and then [<>] to make a snippet here if you wish to keep the answer in the question
    – mplungjan
    Jan 7 at 11:32
11

The function will return true if the given string is in the right format('MM/DD/YYYY') else it will return false. (I found this code online & modified it a little)

function isValidDate(date) {
    var temp = date.split('/');
    var d = new Date(temp[2] + '/' + temp[0] + '/' + temp[1]);
    return (d && (d.getMonth() + 1) == temp[0] && d.getDate() == Number(temp[1]) && d.getFullYear() == Number(temp[2]));
}

console.log(isValidDate('02/28/2015'));
            

2
  • This accepts ˙'1/010/100˙ which isn't in mm/dd/yyyy format.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 9:06
  • And this code looks almost exactly the same as an existing answer, except that it tries to validate mm/dd/yyyy instead of dd/mm/yyyy.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 9:12
4

It's ok if you want to check validate dd/MM/yyyy

function isValidDate(date) {
    var temp = date.split('/');
    var d = new Date(temp[1] + '/' + temp[0] + '/' + temp[2]);
     return (d && (d.getMonth() + 1) == temp[1] && d.getDate() == Number(temp[0]) && d.getFullYear() == Number(temp[2]));
}

alert(isValidDate('29/02/2015')); // it not exist ---> false
            

1
  • The question is about validating mm/dd/yyyy, not dd/mm/yyyy. And this considers '1/010/100' a valid format.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 9:14
4

Expanding (or better contracting) on @Jay Dunnings answer, the following two-liner uses the Intl API and ES6 destructuring. It passes all tests given by Jay Dunning.

/**
 * @param {string} date
 * @returns {boolean} true if date is of the form mm/dd/yyyy
 */
function is_en_US_date(date) {
    const [match, mm, dd, yyyy] = /^(\d\d)[/](\d\d)[/](\d{4})$/.exec(date) || [];
    return match !== undefined && new Intl.DateTimeFormat('en-US', { month: '2-digit', day: '2-digit', year: 'numeric' }).format(new Date(yyyy, mm-1, dd)) === date
}
2

Here is one snippet to check for valid date:

function validateDate(dateStr) {
   const regExp = /^(\d\d?)\/(\d\d?)\/(\d{4})$/;
   let matches = dateStr.match(regExp);
   let isValid = matches;
   let maxDate = [0, 31, 29, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31];
   
   if (matches) {
     const month = parseInt(matches[1]);
     const date = parseInt(matches[2]);
     const year = parseInt(matches[3]);
     
     isValid = month <= 12 && month > 0;
     isValid &= date <= maxDate[month] && date > 0;
     
     const leapYear = (year % 400 == 0)
        || (year % 4 == 0 && year % 100 != 0);
     isValid &= month != 2 || leapYear || date <= 28; 
   }
   
   return isValid
}

console.log(['1/1/2017', '01/1/2017', '1/01/2017', '01/01/2017', '13/12/2017', '13/13/2017', '12/35/2017'].map(validateDate));

1
  • 1/1/2017 isn't in the format mm/dd/yyyy.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 4, 2022 at 8:15
2

Alternative

This question has already been answered ad nauseum, I know, but I'd like to throw myself to the SO wolves by proposing an alternative solution.

AFAICT, this method isn't presented in any of the other answers. And maybe there's some edge case that I'm not considering... I'm sure y'all will duly roast me if so.

Someone once said-- Jesus or Confucius, maybe --

When you decide to solve a problem with regex, now you have two problems

That said, I love regex and use it on a regular basis for other things; however, recently, I ran into an issue with one of the top answers on here, which threw a false positive for an invalid date. It used too strict a regex. I replaced said check of a date string (dd/dd/dddd) with the following:

const isInvalidDate = (dateString) => new Date(dateString).toString() === 'Invalid Date'

console.log(isInvalidDate('asdf')) //> true
console.log(isInvalidDate('09/29/1985')) //> false

Edit 2022

My alternative solution remains the same since I posted it, but it could perhaps be better written in a non-negative-ish form to minimize cognitive strain. So, if you're gonna copy-paste it, copy-paste this instead:

const isValidDate = (dateString) => new Date(dateString).toString() !== 'Invalid Date'

console.log(isValidDate('asdf')) //> false
console.log(isValidDate('09/29/1985')) //> true

Why am I still talking?

As @jay-dunning points out above, this solution may not be ideal for some applications (presumably those implemented in <ES5? cough). I'm not at all compelled to stop using my solution, but just beware:

  • Date.parse() shouldn't be used for local date strings. MDN says "It is not recommended to use Date.parse as until ES5, parsing of strings was entirely implementation dependent." The standard requires a
    (potentially simplified) ISO 8601 string; support for any other
    format is implementation-dependent.
  • Nor should new Date(string) be used, because that uses Date.parse().
1
  • The question is specifically about the mm/dd/yyyy format, not anything vaguely resembling a date that can be parsed.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 9:15
1

Moment is really a good one to resolve it. I don't see reason to add complexity just to check date... take a look on moment : http://momentjs.com/

HTML :

<input class="form-control" id="date" name="date" onchange="isValidDate(this);" placeholder="DD/MM/YYYY" type="text" value="">

Script :

 function isValidDate(dateString)  {
    var dateToValidate = dateString.value
    var isValid = moment(dateToValidate, 'MM/DD/YYYY',true).isValid()
    if (isValid) {
        dateString.style.backgroundColor = '#FFFFFF';
    } else {
        dateString.style.backgroundColor = '#fba';
    }   
};
1

Find in the below code which enables to perform the date validation for any of the supplied format to validate start/from and end/to dates. There could be some better approaches but have come up with this. Note supplied date format and date string go hand in hand.

function validate() {

  var format = 'yyyy-MM-dd';

  if (isAfterCurrentDate(document.getElementById('start').value, format)) {
    console.log('Date is after the current date.');
  } else {
    console.log('Date is not after the current date.');
  }
  if (isBeforeCurrentDate(document.getElementById('start').value, format)) {
    console.log('Date is before current date.');
  } else {
    console.log('Date is not before current date.');
  }
  if (isCurrentDate(document.getElementById('start').value, format)) {
    console.log('Date is current date.');
  } else {
    console.log('Date is not a current date.');
  }
  if (isBefore(document.getElementById('start').value, document.getElementById('end').value, format)) {
    console.log('Start/Effective Date cannot be greater than End/Expiration Date');
  } else {
    console.log('Valid dates...');
  }
  if (isAfter(document.getElementById('start').value, document.getElementById('end').value, format)) {
    console.log('End/Expiration Date cannot be less than Start/Effective Date');
  } else {
    console.log('Valid dates...');
  }
  if (isEquals(document.getElementById('start').value, document.getElementById('end').value, format)) {
    console.log('Dates are equals...');
  } else {
    console.log('Dates are not equals...');
  }
  if (isDate(document.getElementById('start').value, format)) {
    console.log('Is valid date...');
  } else {
    console.log('Is invalid date...');
  }
}

/**
 * This method gets the year index from the supplied format
 */
function getYearIndex(format) {

  var tokens = splitDateFormat(format);

  if (tokens[0] === 'YYYY' ||
    tokens[0] === 'yyyy') {
    return 0;
  } else if (tokens[1] === 'YYYY' ||
    tokens[1] === 'yyyy') {
    return 1;
  } else if (tokens[2] === 'YYYY' ||
    tokens[2] === 'yyyy') {
    return 2;
  }
  // Returning the default value as -1
  return -1;
}

/**
 * This method returns the year string located at the supplied index
 */
function getYear(date, index) {

  var tokens = splitDateFormat(date);
  return tokens[index];
}

/**
 * This method gets the month index from the supplied format
 */
function getMonthIndex(format) {

  var tokens = splitDateFormat(format);

  if (tokens[0] === 'MM' ||
    tokens[0] === 'mm') {
    return 0;
  } else if (tokens[1] === 'MM' ||
    tokens[1] === 'mm') {
    return 1;
  } else if (tokens[2] === 'MM' ||
    tokens[2] === 'mm') {
    return 2;
  }
  // Returning the default value as -1
  return -1;
}

/**
 * This method returns the month string located at the supplied index
 */
function getMonth(date, index) {

  var tokens = splitDateFormat(date);
  return tokens[index];
}

/**
 * This method gets the date index from the supplied format
 */
function getDateIndex(format) {

  var tokens = splitDateFormat(format);

  if (tokens[0] === 'DD' ||
    tokens[0] === 'dd') {
    return 0;
  } else if (tokens[1] === 'DD' ||
    tokens[1] === 'dd') {
    return 1;
  } else if (tokens[2] === 'DD' ||
    tokens[2] === 'dd') {
    return 2;
  }
  // Returning the default value as -1
  return -1;
}

/**
 * This method returns the date string located at the supplied index
 */
function getDate(date, index) {

  var tokens = splitDateFormat(date);
  return tokens[index];
}

/**
 * This method returns true if date1 is before date2 else return false
 */
function isBefore(date1, date2, format) {
  // Validating if date1 date is greater than the date2 date
  if (new Date(getYear(date1, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date1, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date1, getDateIndex(format))).getTime() >
    new Date(getYear(date2, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date2, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date2, getDateIndex(format))).getTime()) {
    return true;
  }
  return false;
}

/**
 * This method returns true if date1 is after date2 else return false
 */
function isAfter(date1, date2, format) {
  // Validating if date2 date is less than the date1 date
  if (new Date(getYear(date2, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date2, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date2, getDateIndex(format))).getTime() <
    new Date(getYear(date1, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date1, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date1, getDateIndex(format))).getTime()
  ) {
    return true;
  }
  return false;
}

/**
 * This method returns true if date1 is equals to date2 else return false
 */
function isEquals(date1, date2, format) {
  // Validating if date1 date is equals to the date2 date
  if (new Date(getYear(date1, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date1, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date1, getDateIndex(format))).getTime() ===
    new Date(getYear(date2, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date2, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date2, getDateIndex(format))).getTime()) {
    return true;
  }
  return false;
}

/**
 * This method validates and returns true if the supplied date is 
 * equals to the current date.
 */
function isCurrentDate(date, format) {
  // Validating if the supplied date is the current date
  if (new Date(getYear(date, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date, getDateIndex(format))).getTime() ===
    new Date(new Date().getFullYear(),
      new Date().getMonth(),
      new Date().getDate()).getTime()) {
    return true;
  }
  return false;
}

/**
 * This method validates and returns true if the supplied date value 
 * is before the current date.
 */
function isBeforeCurrentDate(date, format) {
  // Validating if the supplied date is before the current date
  if (new Date(getYear(date, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date, getDateIndex(format))).getTime() <
    new Date(new Date().getFullYear(),
      new Date().getMonth(),
      new Date().getDate()).getTime()) {
    return true;
  }
  return false;
}

/**
 * This method validates and returns true if the supplied date value 
 * is after the current date.
 */
function isAfterCurrentDate(date, format) {
  // Validating if the supplied date is before the current date
  if (new Date(getYear(date, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date, getDateIndex(format))).getTime() >
    new Date(new Date().getFullYear(),
      new Date().getMonth(),
      new Date().getDate()).getTime()) {
    return true;
  }
  return false;
}

/**
 * This method splits the supplied date OR format based 
 * on non alpha numeric characters in the supplied string.
 */
function splitDateFormat(dateFormat) {
  // Spliting the supplied string based on non characters
  return dateFormat.split(/\W/);
}

/*
 * This method validates if the supplied value is a valid date.
 */
function isDate(date, format) {
  // Validating if the supplied date string is valid and not a NaN (Not a Number)
  if (!isNaN(new Date(getYear(date, getYearIndex(format)),
      getMonth(date, getMonthIndex(format)) - 1,
      getDate(date, getDateIndex(format))))) {
    return true;
  }
  return false;
}
<input type="text" name="start" id="start" size="10" value="" />
<br/>
<input type="text" name="end" id="end" size="10" value="" />
<br/>
<input type="button" value="Submit" onclick="validate();" />

1
  • That's way too much code to just validate a date. And if the required format is mm/dd/yyyy I don't want it to accept 10.10.10.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 9:33
0
function fdate_validate(vi)
{
  var parts =vi.split('/');
  var result;
  var mydate = new Date(parts[2],parts[1]-1,parts[0]);
  if (parts[2] == mydate.getYear() && parts[1]-1 == mydate.getMonth() && parts[0] == mydate.getDate() )
  {result=0;}
  else
  {result=1;}
  return(result);
}
2
  • 3
    While this code may answer the question, providing additional context regarding how and/or why it solves the problem would improve the answer's long-term value. Jun 23, 2017 at 1:25
  • This doesn't work at all. It always returns 1 which for some reason indicates invalid date.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 9:59
0

Date is complex. The best way to validate it is using package like Luxon , date-fns, or DayJS.

Using date-fns:

import {isMatch} from 'date-fns'

const match = isMatch('12/25/2010', 'MM/dd/yyyy') // true
5
  • This doesn't work, it returns false.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 8:50
  • yes, you are right, the argument is wrong, I edit it with the correct one. Oct 6, 2022 at 9:40
  • this is not working: console.log(isMatch("12/25/2", "MM/dd/yyyy")); // true console.log(isMatch("1/5/2", "MM/dd/yyyy")); // true this are completly invalid dates this seems not to be correct Nov 3, 2022 at 21:28
  • @RalfHannuschka, that is a valid date, 25 December 2 and 5 January 2. Nov 5, 2022 at 2:41
  • @AbrahamAnakAgung yeah Date is maybe valid but it should match the pattern like MM/dd/yyyy and i would say 1/5/2 does not match the pattern for Month(2 digits)/Day(2 digits)/Year(4 digits) but for date-fns it matches. Nov 7, 2022 at 20:55
-1

Similar to Elian Ebbing answer, but support "\", "/", ".", "-", " " delimiters

function js_validate_date_dmyyyy(js_datestr)
{
    var js_days_in_year = [ 0, 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31 ];
    var js_datepattern = /^(\d{1,2})([\.\-\/\\ ])(\d{1,2})([\.\-\/\\ ])(\d{4})$/;

    if (! js_datepattern.test(js_datestr)) { return false; }

    var js_match = js_datestr.match(js_datepattern);
    var js_day = parseInt(js_match[1]);
    var js_delimiter1 = js_match[2];
    var js_month = parseInt(js_match[3]);
    var js_delimiter2 = js_match[4];
    var js_year = parseInt(js_match[5]);                            

    if (js_is_leap_year(js_year)) { js_days_in_year[2] = 29; }

    if (js_delimiter1 !== js_delimiter2) { return false; } 
    if (js_month === 0  ||  js_month > 12)  { return false; } 
    if (js_day === 0  ||  js_day > js_days_in_year[js_month])   { return false; } 

    return true;
}

function js_is_leap_year(js_year)
{ 
    if(js_year % 4 === 0)
    { 
        if(js_year % 100 === 0)
        { 
            if(js_year % 400 === 0)
            { 
                return true; 
            } 
            else return false; 
        } 
        else return true; 
    } 
    return false; 
}
2
  • 1
    your days and months are backwards. Sep 27, 2017 at 15:08
  • "30.7.2022" is't a valid mm/dd/yyyy format.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 5, 2022 at 10:04
-1
  1. Javascript

    function validateDate(date) {
        try {
            new Date(date).toISOString();
            return true;
        } catch (e) { 
            return false; 
        }
    }
    
  2. JQuery

    $.fn.validateDate = function() {
        try {
            new Date($(this[0]).val()).toISOString();
            return true;
        } catch (e) { 
            return false; 
        }
    }
    

returns true for a valid date string.

1
  • The requirement is specifically for the format mm/dd/yyyy. validateDate("2022-10-04") shouldn't return true.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 4, 2022 at 7:49
-1

we can use customized function or date pattern. Below code is customized function as per your requirement please change it.

 function isValidDate(str, separator = '-') {
    var getvalue = str.split(separator);
    var day = parseInt(getvalue[2]);
    var month = parseInt(getvalue[1]);
    var year = parseInt(getvalue[0]);
    if(year < 1901 || year > 2100){
       return false;
    }
    if (month < 1 || month > 12) { 
       return false;
    }
    if (day < 1 || day > 31) {
       return false;
    }
    if ((month==4 && month==6 && month==9 && month==11) && day==31) {
       return false;
    }
    if (month == 2) { // check for february 29th
       var isleap = (year % 4 == 0 && (year % 100 != 0 || year % 400 == 0));
       if (day>29 || (day==29 && !isleap)) {
          return false;
       }
    }
    else{
       return true;
    }
    return true;
}
1
  • The required format is mm/dd/yyyy not yyyy-m-d. And isValidDate("failure") returns true.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 4, 2022 at 7:30
-1
function validatedate(inputText, DateFormat) {
    // format dd/mm/yyyy or in any order of (dd or mm or yyyy) you can write dd or mm or yyyy in first or second or third position ... or can be slash"/" or dot"." or dash"-" in the dates formats
    var invalid = "";
    var dt = "";
    var mn = "";
    var yr = "";
    var k;
    var delm = DateFormat.includes("/") ? "/" : ( DateFormat.includes("-") ? "-" : ( DateFormat.includes(".") ? "." : "" ) ) ;
    var f1 = inputText.split(delm);
    var f2 = DateFormat.split(delm);
    for(k=0;k<=2;k++) { 
        dt = dt + (f2[parseInt(k)]=="dd" ? f1[parseInt(k)] : "");
        mn = mn + (f2[parseInt(k)]=="mm" ? f1[parseInt(k)] : "");
        yr = yr + (f2[parseInt(k)]=="yyyy" ? f1[parseInt(k)] : "");
    }
    var mn_days = "0-31-" + (yr % 4 == 0 ? 29 : 28) + "-31-30-31-30-31-31-30-31-30-31";
    var days = mn_days.split("-");
    if (f1.length!=3 ||
    mn.length>2 ||
    dt.length>2 ||
    yr.length!=4 ||
    !(parseInt(mn)>=1 && parseInt(mn)<=12) ||
    !(parseInt(yr)>=parseInt(1900) && parseInt(yr)<=parseInt(2100)) ||
    !(parseInt(dt)>=1 && parseInt(dt)<=parseInt(days[parseInt(mn)]))) {
        invalid = "true";
    }
    alert( ( invalid=="true" ? "Invalid Date" : "Valid Date")  );
}
2
  • 2
    Please don't post only code as answer, but also provide an explanation what your code does and how it solves the problem of the question. Answers with an explanation are usually more helpful and of better quality, and are more likely to attract upvotes.
    – Tyler2P
    Jul 10, 2021 at 13:18
  • Why are you parsing integers into integers? Why are you parsing the same string multiple times? Why are you building a string and then spiting it just to get an array? Just make an array. Why are you assigning strings "true" and ""` instead of booleans true and false? Why are you using an alert instead of just returning the result. This also doesn't properly calculate leap years. 1900 and 2100 aren't leap years.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 4, 2022 at 8:06
-2

First string date is converted to js date format and converted into string format again, then it is compared with original string.

function dateValidation(){
    var dateString = "34/05/2019"
    var dateParts = dateString.split("/");
    var date= new Date(+dateParts[2], dateParts[1] - 1, +dateParts[0]);

    var isValid = isValidDate( dateString, date );
    console.log("Is valid date: " + isValid);
}

function isValidDate(dateString, date) {
    var newDateString = ( date.getDate()<10 ? ('0'+date.getDate()) : date.getDate() )+ '/'+ ((date.getMonth() + 1)<10? ('0'+(date.getMonth() + 1)) : (date.getMonth() + 1) )  + '/' +  date.getFullYear();
    return ( dateString == newDateString);
}
2
  • This will not run because ìsValid` is not a function. Mar 23, 2021 at 19:36
  • The required format is mm/dd/yyyy not dd/mm/yyyy
    – gre_gor
    Oct 4, 2022 at 7:46
-4
var date = new Date(date_string)

returns the literal 'Invalid Date' for any invalid date_string.

Note: Please see the comment's below.

5
-5

function validatedate(inputText, dateFormat) {
  var minYear = 1950;
  var maxYear = 2050;
  inputText = inputText.toLowerCase();
  if (dateFormat == "dd/mmm/yyyy" || dateFormat == "dd-mmm-yyyy" || dateFormat == "dd.mmm.yyyy" || dateFormat == "dd/yyyy/mmm" || dateFormat == "dd-yyyy-mmm" || dateFormat == "dd.yyyy.mmm" || dateFormat == "mmm/dd/yyyy" || dateFormat == "mmm-dd-yyyy" || dateFormat == "mmm.dd.yyyy" || dateFormat == "mmm/yyyy/dd" || dateFormat == "mmm-yyyy-dd" || dateFormat == "mmm.yyyy.dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy/mmm/dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy-mmm-dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy.mmm.dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy/dd/mmm" || dateFormat == "yyyy-dd-mmm" || dateFormat == "yyyy.dd.mmm") {
    dateFormat = dateFormat.replace("mmm", "mm");
    inputText = inputText.replace("jan", "01");
    inputText = inputText.replace("feb", "02");
    inputText = inputText.replace("mar", "03");
    inputText = inputText.replace("apr", "04");
    inputText = inputText.replace("may", "05");
    inputText = inputText.replace("jun", "06");
    inputText = inputText.replace("jul", "07");
    inputText = inputText.replace("aug", "08");
    inputText = inputText.replace("sep", "09");
    inputText = inputText.replace("oct", "10");
    inputText = inputText.replace("nov", "11");
    inputText = inputText.replace("dec", "12");
  }


  var w;
  var q;
  var delm;
  delm1 = "/";

  for (w = 0; w < inputText.length; w++) {
    q = inputText.charAt(w);
    if (q == '0' || q == '1' || q == '2' || q == '3' || q == '4' || q == '5' || q == '6' || q == '7' || q == '8' || q == '9' || q == '/') {} else {
      delm1 = "";
    }
  }
  delm2 = "-";

  for (w = 0; w < inputText.length; w++) {
    q = inputText.charAt(w);
    if (q == '0' || q == '1' || q == '2' || q == '3' || q == '4' || q == '5' || q == '6' || q == '7' || q == '8' || q == '9' || q == '-') {} else {
      delm2 = "";
    }
  }

  delm3 = ".";

  for (w = 0; w < inputText.length; w++) {
    q = inputText.charAt(w);
    if (q == '0' || q == '1' || q == '2' || q == '3' || q == '4' || q == '5' || q == '6' || q == '7' || q == '8' || q == '9' || q == '.') {} else {
      delm3 = "";
    }
  }

  var delm;
  if (delm1 == "/" && (dateFormat == "dd/mm/yyyy" || dateFormat == "mm/dd/yyyy" || dateFormat == "dd/yyyy/mm" || dateFormat == "mm/yyyy/dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy/mm/dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy/dd/mm")) {
    delm = "/";
  }

  if (delm2 == "-" && (dateFormat == "dd-mm-yyyy" || dateFormat == "mm-dd-yyyy" || dateFormat == "dd-yyyy-mm" || dateFormat == "mm-yyyy-dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy-mm-dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy-dd-mm")) {
    delm = "-";
  }
  if (delm3 == "." && (dateFormat == "dd.mm.yyyy" || dateFormat == "mm.dd.yyyy" || dateFormat == "dd.yyyy.mm" || dateFormat == "mm.yyyy.dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy.mm.dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy.dd.mm")) {
    delm = ".";
  }

  var invalid;
  var f = "31/12/2000";
  f = inputText;
  var ln = f.length;
  var dt;
  var mn;
  var yr;
  var t = f.split(delm);
  var j = t.length;
  if (j == 3) {
    dt = t[0];
    mn = t[1];
    yr = t[2];

    if (dateFormat == "mm.dd.yyyy" || dateFormat == "mm/dd/yyyy" || dateFormat == "mm-dd-yyyy") {
      var tmp = mn;
      mn = dt;
      dt = tmp;
    }

    if (dateFormat == "dd.yyyy.mm" || dateFormat == "dd/yyyy/mm" || dateFormat == "dd-yyyy-mm") {
      var tmp = mn;
      mn = yr;
      yr = tmp;
    }
    if (dateFormat == "mm.yyyy.dd" || dateFormat == "mm/yyyy/dd" || dateFormat == "mm-yyyy-dd") {
      var m1 = mn;
      var d1 = dt;
      var y1 = yr;
      mn = d1;
      yr = m1;
      dt = y1;
    }

    if (dateFormat == "yyyy.mm.dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy/mm/dd" || dateFormat == "yyyy-mm-dd") {
      var m1 = mn;
      var d1 = dt;
      var y1 = yr;
      mn = m1;
      yr = d1;
      dt = y1;
    }

    if (dateFormat == "yyyy.dd.mm" || dateFormat == "yyyy/dd/mm" || dateFormat == "yyyy-dd-mm") {
      var m1 = mn;
      var d1 = dt;
      var y1 = yr;
      mn = y1;
      yr = d1;
      dt = m1;
    }

    if (parseInt(yr) >= parseInt(minYear) && parseInt(yr) <= parseInt(maxYear)) {
      // do nothing
    } else {
      invalid = true;
    }
    if (mn.length > 2) {
      invalid = true;
    }
    if (dt.length > 2) {
      invalid = true;
    }

    if (t[0] == "") {
      invalid = true;
    }
    if (t[1] == "") {
      invalid = true;
    }
    if (t[2] == "") {
      invalid = true;
    }

    if (j != 3) {
      invalid = true;
    }
    var dc;
    var daysArray = "0-31-28-31-30-31-30-31-31-30-31-30-31";

    if ((yr % 4) == 0) {
      daysArray = "0-31-29-31-30-31-30-31-31-30-31-30-31";
    }
    var days = daysArray.split("-");
    if (parseInt(dt) >= 1 && parseInt(dt) <= days[parseInt(mn)]) {} else {
      invalid = true;
    }

    if (yr.length != 4) {
      invalid = true;
    }

    var i;
    var m;

    for (i = 0; i < ln; i++) {
      m = f.charAt(i);
      if (m == '0' || m == '1' || m == '2' || m == '3' || m == '4' || m == '5' || m == '6' || m == '7' || m == '8' || m == '9' || m == delm) {} else {
        invalid = true;
      }
    }
  } else {
    invalid = true;
  }

  console.log(inputText,invalid ? "Invalid Date" : "Valid Date");

}

3
  • 1
    This is a long solution. When you're converting capital letters to lower case letters instead of using many String.prototype.replace methods you could use one String.prototype.toLowerCase. You also use /, -, and . as delimiters between days, months, and years. Instead of hardcoding this you could generate these formats with the delimiters. Jun 26, 2021 at 20:33
  • This is a lengthy code but it is implementable and in working condition in almost every date format if you want to validate date Jun 27, 2021 at 5:31
  • There is way better and shorter code for validation than this. This code is completely unnecessarily complex and doesn't even return the result and instead uses the annoying alert.
    – gre_gor
    Oct 4, 2022 at 7:17

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