Similar to this answer, Date can be used to check if the parsed version of the string corresponds to the original date string.
> datestring_valid = "2020-02-29";
> parsed_Date = new Date(datestring_valid);
> parsed_Date.toISOString().slice(0,10) == datestring_valid;
true
> datestring_invalid = "2021-02-29";
> parsed_Date = new Date(datestring_invalid);
> parsed_Date.toISOString().slice(0,10) == datestring_invalid;
false
NB: This requires the date string to be ISO formatted.
The reason this works is, that Date parses some invalid dates into something valid as in the example above. However, supplying "2020-01-32" into Date will result in the result being "Invalid Date" that isNaN.
A function that handles all of this is the following:
function isValidDateString(datestring) {
parsed_Date = new Date(datestring);
return (parsed_Date.toISOString().slice(0,10) == datestring) && !isNaN(parsed_Date)
};
> isValidDateString(datestring_valid)
true
> isValidDateString(datestring_invalid)
false