Reputation: 383
I am attempting to validate a date text box to make sure the correct date format was entered.
I converted this vb6 code:
If (IsDate(txtBirthDate)) And (IsNumeric(Right(txtBirthDate, 4))))
into this C# code -
int output = 1;
DateTime output2;
if ((! DateTime.TryParse(txtBirthDate.Text, out output2)) & (!int.TryParse((txtBirthDate.Text.Substring(txtBirthDate.Text.Length - 5)), out output)))
{
MessageBox.Show("error")
}
What I am attempting to do is make sure that the last 4 digits of the date text box are numeric (the year - i.e 1990 in 05/10/1990) and if it is not a number, then show error. Although I cannot verify everything is numeric due to the "/" in the date format.
The code does not show an error and builds. But when I debug the application I receive an error. The error states:
Index and length must refer to a location within the string.
Parameter name: length.
Any ideas on how to accomplish this?
Upvotes: 1
Views: 2655
Reputation: 2812
To check if a date is in a specific format, use DateTime.TryParseExact()
:
if (!DateTime.TryParseExact(output , "d/M/yyyy", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, DateTimeStyles.None, out output2))
{
MessageBox.Show("error")
}
EDIT: Change the format according to your needs:
"d/M/yyyy"
for UK and "M/d/yyyy"
for US
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 2095
int result;
if (int.TryParse(txtBirthDate.Text.Substring(test.LastIndexOf("/")), out result))
{
//its good
}
else
{
//its bad
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 91567
Edit: It sounds like the cause of your error is your string is too short. Test the string length before you test the last 4 characters.
Three other issues:
And
operator in C# is &&
. You are using &
which is a bitwise operator..Length - 4
, not 5
.!
. But, it looks like that's not what you are actually trying to do. It looks like you want to show an error message if either the string is not parsable as a date or the year portion is not 4 digits. In that case use a an or comparison (||
):if (!DateTime.TryParse(txtBirthDate.Text, out output2) ||
txtBirthDate.Text.Length < 4 ||
!int.TryParse((txtBirthDate.Text.Substring(txtBirthDate.Text.Length - 4)), out output))
{
MessageBox.Show("error")
}
Keep in mind that yyyy/M/d
is also parsable as a Date, contains a 4-digit year, but will fail your test. Is that what you want?
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 37543
From the error provided it looks like you just need a length check to make sure you can process the code. You should also use && instead of & (or in this case probably ||) to ensure that the boolean expressions stop executing once a true state has been encountered.
if (txtBirthDate.Text.Length < 5 ||
(!DateTime.TryParse(txtBirthDate.Text, out output2) ||
!int.TryParse((txtBirthDate.Text.Substring(txtBirthDate.Text.Length - 5)), out output)))
{
MessageBox.Show("error")
}
However, this might be a good case for the use of a regular expression.
Regex reg = new Regex("^\d{2}/\d{2}/\d{4}$");
if (!reg.IsMatch(txtBirthDate.Text))
MessageBox.Show("error");
Tweaking of the regular expression to match fringe cases (leading zero's, alternate formats, etc) may be necessary.
Upvotes: 0