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Home/ Questions/Q 863661
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T09:21:00+00:00 2026-05-15T09:21:00+00:00

We have to handle user specified date formats in our application. We decided to

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We have to handle user specified date formats in our application. We decided to go with Date.strptime for parsing and validation, which works great, except for how it just ignores any garbage data entered. Here is an irb session demonstrating the issue

ree-1.8.7-2010.01 > require 'date'
 => true 
ree-1.8.7-2010.01 > d = Date.strptime '2001-01-01failfailfail', '%Y-%m-%d'
 => #<Date: 4903821/2,0,2299161> 
ree-1.8.7-2010.01 > d.to_s
 => "2001-01-01" 

what we would like, is behavior more like this

ree-1.8.7-2010.01 > d = Date.strptime '2001failfailfail-01-01', '%Y-%m-%d'
ArgumentError: invalid date

Any suggestions would be appreciated

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T09:21:01+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 9:21 am

    One possibility is to pass the resulting date through strftime using the same format and compare to the original string.

    i.e. valid = Date.strptime(date_string, format).strftime(format) == date_string

    One limitation of this is that it wouldn’t handle leading 0s in parts of the date e.g. if you wanted to accept 2010-6-1 but strftime returned 2010-06-01 you wouldn’t have a match.

    Also, I’m not sure if this is what you meant or not, but your second example Date.strptime '2001failfailfail-01-01', '%Y-%m-%d' does raise an ArgumentError. It seems like only trailing junk is ignored.

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