I am using a function which sets a cookie. This function allows the cookie name, the cookie value and an additional expiry date of the cookie to be passed into it.
function setCookie(name, value, exdate) {
var c_value = escape(value) +
((exdate === null || exdate === undefined) ? "" : "; expires=" + exdate);
document.cookie = name + "=" + c_value;
};
Usage:
setCookie("my-cookie-name","my-value","Sun, 15 Jul 2012 00:00:01 GMT");
I have used the function with the date format above and believe it is cross browser compatible as I have tested if the cookie remains after closing various browsers and reopening them. I discovered that there were problems when using a format like "15 Jul 2012". This format worked for me during development in Firefox, but other browsers only seemed to set the cookie as a session cookie.
Should I stick to using just this format: "Sun, 15 Jul 2012 00:00:01 GMT" or are there other formats I could use for the expiry date that will work across the major browsers (IE 7-9, Firefox, Chrome, Opera, Safari)?
Based on testing and further reading into this, a date in a UTC/GMT format is required by cookies e.g. Sun, 15 Jul 2012 00:00:01 GMT
Therefore any dates in other formats such as 15 Jul 2012, or 15/Jul/2012, or 07/15/2012, have to be passed as a
new Dateobject and then through thetoUTCString()or thetoGMTString()function.therefore I have edited my function to the following: