I have a string: "31-02-2010"
and want to check whether or not it is a valid date.
What is the best way to do it?
I need a method which which returns true if the str开发者_StackOverflow社区ing is a valid date and false if it is not.
require 'date'
begin
Date.parse("31-02-2010")
rescue ArgumentError
# handle invalid date
end
d, m, y = date_string.split '-'
Date.valid_date? y.to_i, m.to_i, d.to_i
Here is a simple one liner:
DateTime.parse date rescue nil
I probably wouldn't recommend doing exactly this in every situation in real life as you force the caller to check for nil, eg. particularly when formatting. If you return a default date|error it may be friendlier.
Parsing dates can run into some gotcha's, especially when they are in a MM/DD/YYYY or DD/MM/YYYY format, such as short dates used in U.S. or Europe.
Date#parse
attempts to figure out which to use, but there are many days in a month throughout the year when ambiguity between the formats can cause parsing problems.
I'd recommend finding out what the LOCALE of the user is, then, based on that, you'll know how to parse intelligently using Date.strptime
. The best way to find where a user is located is to ask them during sign-up, and then provide a setting in their preferences to change it. Assuming you can dig it out by some clever heuristic and not bother the user for that information, is prone to failure so just ask.
This is a test using Date.parse
. I'm in the U.S.:
>> Date.parse('01/31/2001')
ArgumentError: invalid date
>> Date.parse('31/01/2001') #=> #<Date: 2001-01-31 (4903881/2,0,2299161)>
The first was the correct format for the U.S.: mm/dd/yyyy, but Date didn't like it. The second was correct for Europe, but if your customers are predominately U.S.-based, you'll get a lot of badly parsed dates.
Ruby's Date.strptime
is used like:
>> Date.strptime('12/31/2001', '%m/%d/%Y') #=> #<Date: 2001-12-31 (4904549/2,0,2299161)>
Date.valid_date? *date_string.split('-').reverse.map(&:to_i)
I'd like to extend Date
class.
class Date
def self.parsable?(string)
begin
parse(string)
true
rescue ArgumentError
false
end
end
end
example
Date.parsable?("10-10-2010")
# => true
Date.parse("10-10-2010")
# => Sun, 10 Oct 2010
Date.parsable?("1")
# => false
Date.parse("1")
# ArgumentError: invalid date from (pry):106:in `parse'
Another way to validate date:
date_hash = Date._parse(date.to_s)
Date.valid_date?(date_hash[:year].to_i,
date_hash[:mon].to_i,
date_hash[:mday].to_i)
Try regex for all dates:
/(\d{1,2}[-\/]\d{1,2}[-\/]\d{4})|(\d{4}[-\/]\d{1,2}[-\/]\d{1,2})/.match("31-02-2010")
For only your format with leading zeroes, year last and dashes:
/(\d{2}-\d{2}-\d{4})/.match("31-02-2010")
the [-/] means either - or /, the forward slash must be escaped. You can test this on http://gskinner.com/RegExr/
add the following lines, they will all be highlighted if you use the first regex, without the first and last / (they are for use in ruby code).
2004-02-01
2004/02/01
01-02-2004
1-2-2004
2004-2-1
A stricter solution
It's easier to verify the correctness of a date if you specify the date format you expect. However, even then, Ruby is a bit too tolerant for my use case:
Date.parse("Tue, 2017-01-17", "%a, %Y-%m-%d") # works
Date.parse("Wed, 2017-01-17", "%a, %Y-%m-%d") # works - !?
Clearly, at least one of these strings specifies the wrong weekday, but Ruby happily ignores that.
Here's a method that doesn't; it validates that date.strftime(format)
converts back to the same input string that it parsed with Date.strptime
according to format
.
module StrictDateParsing
# If given "Tue, 2017-01-17" and "%a, %Y-%m-%d", will return the parsed date.
# If given "Wed, 2017-01-17" and "%a, %Y-%m-%d", will error because that's not
# a Wednesday.
def self.parse(input_string, format)
date = Date.strptime(input_string, format)
confirmation = date.strftime(format)
if confirmation == input_string
date
else
fail InvalidDate.new(
"'#{input_string}' parsed as '#{format}' is inconsistent (eg, weekday doesn't match date)"
)
end
end
InvalidDate = Class.new(RuntimeError)
end
Posting this because it might be of use to someone later. No clue if this is a "good" way to do it or not, but it works for me and is extendible.
class String
def is_date?
temp = self.gsub(/[-.\/]/, '')
['%m%d%Y','%m%d%y','%M%D%Y','%M%D%y'].each do |f|
begin
return true if Date.strptime(temp, f)
rescue
#do nothing
end
end
return false
end
end
This add-on for String class lets you specify your list of delimiters in line 4 and then your list of valid formats in line 5. Not rocket science, but makes it really easy to extend and lets you simply check a string like so:
"test".is_date?
"10-12-2010".is_date?
params[:some_field].is_date?
etc.
You can try the following, which is the simple way:
"31-02-2010".try(:to_date)
But you need to handle the exception.
Similar to the solution by @ironsand, I prefer to create an overridden instance method on String
:
class String
def valid_datetime?
to_datetime
true
rescue ArgumentError
false
end
end
require 'date'
#new_date and old_date should be String
# Note we need a ()
def time_between(new_date, old_date)
new_date = (Date.parse new_date rescue nil)
old_date = (Date.parse old_date rescue nil)
return nil if new_date.nil? || old_date.nil?
(new_date - old_date).to_i
end
puts time_between(1,2).nil?
#=> true
puts time_between(Time.now.to_s,Time.now.to_s).nil?
#=> false
Date.parse not raised exception for this examples:
Date.parse("12!12*2012")
=> Thu, 12 Apr 2018
Date.parse("12!12&2012")
=> Thu, 12 Apr 2018
I prefer this solution:
Date.parse("12!12*2012".gsub(/[^\d,\.,\-]/, ''))
=> ArgumentError: invalid date
Date.parse("12-12-2012".gsub(/[^\d,\.,\-]/, ''))
=> Wed, 12 Dec 2012
Date.parse("12.12.2012".gsub(/[^\d,\.,\-]/, ''))
=> Wed, 12 Dec 2012
Method:
require 'date'
def is_date_valid?(d)
Date.valid_date? *"#{Date.strptime(d,"%m/%d/%Y")}".split('-').map(&:to_i) rescue nil
end
Usage:
config[:dates].split(",").all? { |x| is_date_valid?(x)}
This returns true or false if config[:dates] = "12/10/2012,05/09/1520"
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