Según ECMA Script, cuando creas una nueva instancia de Date
pasándole un valor:
new Date (value)
Ocurre lo siguiente:
The [[PrimitiveValue]] internal property of the newly constructed
object is set as follows:
- Let v be ToPrimitive(value).
If Type(v) is String, then
a. Parse v as a date, in exactly the same manner as for the parse
method (15.9.4.2); let V be the time value for this date.
Else, let V be ToNumber(v).
Set the [[PrimitiveValue]] internal property of the newly constructed object to TimeClip(V) and return.
ECMA Script 15.9.3.2
En tu caso (2), como el parámetro es una cadena, se procede a convertir dicha cadena en una fecha válida, mediante el método Date.parse (string)
.
Este método dice que aplica unas reglas muy precisas para hacer la conversión, y que si hay fechas irreconocibles retornará NaN
(Not a Number). Significa que si tu fecha no está en un formato válido, será un valor nulo:
The function first attempts to parse the format of the String
according to the rules called out in Date Time String Format
(15.9.1.15). If the String does not conform to that format the
function may fall back to any implementation-specific heuristics or
implementation-specific date formats. Unrecognisable Strings or dates
containing illegal element values in the format String shall cause
Date.parse to return NaN.
ECMA Script 15.9.4.2
Las reglas que se aplican para convertir tu String en fecha, vienen especificadas en el apartado 15.9.1.15 de ECMA Script:
ECMAScript defines a string interchange format for date-times based
upon a simplification of the ISO 8601 Extended Format. The format is
as follows: YYYY-MM-DDTHH:mm:ss.sssZ
Where the fields are as follows:
YYYY
: is the decimal digits of the year 0000 to 9999 in the
Gregorian calendar.
-
“-” (hyphen) appears literally twice in the string.
MM
is the month of the year from 01 (January) to 12 (December).
DD
is the day of the month from 01 to 31.
T
“T” appears literally in the string, to indicate the beginning of
the time element.
HH
is the number of complete hours that have passed since midnight
as two decimal digits from 00 to 24.
:
“:” (colon) appears literally twice in the string.
mm
is the number of complete minutes since the start of the hour as
two decimal digits from 00 to 59.
ss
is the number of complete seconds since the start of the minute
as two decimal digits from 00 to 59.
.
“.” (dot) appears literally in the string.
sss
is the number of complete milliseconds since the start of the
second as three decimal digits.
Z
is the time zone offset specified as “Z” (for UTC) or either “+”
or “-” followed by a time expression HH:mm
This format includes date-only forms:
YYYY
YYYY-MM
YYYY-MM-DD
It also includes “date-time” forms that consist of one of the above
date-only forms immediately followed by one of the following time
forms with an optional time zone offset appended:
THH:mm
THH:mm:ss
THH:mm:ss.sss
All numbers must be base 10. If the MM or DD fields are absent “01” is
used as the value. If the HH, mm, or ss fields are absent “00” is used
as the value and the value of an absent sss field is “000”. The value
of an absent time zone offset is “Z”.
Illegal values (out-of-bounds as well as syntax errors) in a format
string means that the format string is not a valid instance of this
format.
NOTE 1 As every day both starts and ends with midnight, the two
notations 00:00 and 24:00 are available to distinguish the two
midnights that can be associated with one date. This means that the
following two notations refer to exactly the same point in time:
1995-02-04T24:00 and 1995-02-05T00:00
NOTE 2 There exists no international standard that specifies
abbreviations for civil time zones like CET, EST, etc. and sometimes
the same abbreviation is even used for two very different time zones.
For this reason, ISO 8601 and this format specifies numeric
representations of date and time.
ECMA Script 15.9.1.15
Conclusión
Si vas a construir fechas pasando cadenas al constructor, estas deben cumplir con lo especificado en la sección 15.9.1.15 de ECMA Script indicada más arriba.
Si cambias tu fecha al formato YYYY-MM-DD
o a cualquier otro de los indicados, se creará un objeto válido.
Por ejemplo:
var fechaStr = "2017-11-28";
var fechaDt = new Date(fechaStr);
console.log(fechaDt);
var fechaDt = new Date(2017,11,28,24,00);
console.log(fechaDt);