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JScript Date Object parse Method

Parses a string containing a date, and returns the number of milliseconds between that date and midnight, January 1, 1970.

Syntax: JScript Date Object parse Method

Date.parse(dateVal)

Arguments: JScript Date Object parse Method

dateVal

The required dateVal argument is either a string containing a date in a format such as "Jan 5, 1996 08:47:00" or a VT_DATE value retrieved from an ActiveX object or other object.

Remarks: JScript Date Object parse Method

The parse method returns an integer value representing the number of milliseconds between midnight, January 1, 1970 and the date supplied in dateVal.

The parse method is a static method of the Date object. Because it is a static method, it is invoked as shown in the following code rather than invoked as a method of a created Date object.

var datestring = "November 1, 1997 10:15 AM";

Date.parse(datestring)

The following rules govern what the parse method can successfully parse:

·   Short dates can use either a "/" or "-" date separator, but must follow the month/day/year format, for example "7/20/96."

·   Long dates of the form "July 10 1995" can be given with the year, month, and day in any order, and the year in 2- or 4-digit form. If you use the 2-digit form, the year must be greater than or equal to 70.

·   Any text inside parentheses is treated as a comment. These parentheses may be nested.

·   Both commas and spaces are treated as delimiters. Multiple delimiters are permitted. Month and day names must have two or more characters. Two character names that are not unique are resolved as the last match. For example, "Ju" is resolved as July, not June.

·   The stated day of the week is ignored if it is incorrect given the remainder of the supplied date. For example, "Tuesday November 9 1996" is accepted and parsed even though that date actually falls on a Friday. The resulting Date object contains "Friday November 9 1996."

Note

JScript handles all standard time zones, as well as Universal Coordinated Time (UTC) and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). Hours, minutes, and seconds are separated by colons, although all need not be specified. "10:", "10:11", and "10:11:12" are all valid. If the 24-hour clock is used, it is an error to specify "PM" for times later than 12 noon. For example, "23:15 PM" is an error. A string containing an invalid date is an error. For example, a string containing two years or two months is an error.

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