eval()
is not necessary. This will work fine:
var date = new Date(parseInt(jsonDate.substr(6)));
The substr()
function takes out the /Date(
part, and the parseInt()
function gets the integer and ignores the )/
at the end. The resulting number is passed into the Date
constructor.
I have intentionally left out the radix (the 2nd argument to parseInt
); see my comment below.
Also, I completely agree with Rory’s comment: ISO-8601 dates are preferred over this old format – so this format generally shouldn’t be used for new development.
For ISO-8601 formatted JSON dates, just pass the string into the Date
constructor:
var date = new Date(jsonDate); //no ugly parsing needed; full timezone support