How to create a new Date() in Javascript from a non-standard date format
It's easy enough to split the string into an array and pass the parts directly to the Date object:
var str = "01.01.2010";
var dmy = str.split(".");
var d = new Date(dmy[2], dmy[1] - 1, dmy[0]);
You will need to create a function to extract the date parts and use them with the Date
constructor.
Note that this constructor treats months as zero based numbers (0=Jan, 1=Feb, ..., 11=Dec
).
For example:
function parseDate(input) {
var parts = input.match(/(\d+)/g);
// note parts[1]-1
return new Date(parts[2], parts[1]-1, parts[0]);
}
parseDate('31.05.2010');
// Mon May 31 2010 00:00:00
Edit: For handling a variable format you could do something like this:
function parseDate(input, format) {
format = format || 'yyyy-mm-dd'; // default format
var parts = input.match(/(\d+)/g),
i = 0, fmt = {};
// extract date-part indexes from the format
format.replace(/(yyyy|dd|mm)/g, function(part) { fmt[part] = i++; });
return new Date(parts[fmt['yyyy']], parts[fmt['mm']]-1, parts[fmt['dd']]);
}
parseDate('05.31.2010', 'mm.dd.yyyy');
parseDate('31.05.2010', 'dd.mm.yyyy');
parseDate('2010-05-31');
The above function accepts a format parameter, that should include the yyyy
mm
and dd
placeholders, the separators are not really important, since only digits are captured by the RegExp.
You might also give a look to DateJS, a small library that makes date parsing painless...