| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637 | // This is generated by ESQL's AbstractFunctionTestCase. Do no edit it. See ../README.md for how to regenerate it.*Examples*[source.merge.styled,esql]----include::{esql-specs}/date.csv-spec[tag=to_datetime-str]----[%header.monospaced.styled,format=dsv,separator=|]|===include::{esql-specs}/date.csv-spec[tag=to_datetime-str-result]|===Note that in this example, the last value in the source multi-valued field has not been converted.The reason being that if the date format is not respected, the conversion will result in a *null* value.When this happens a _Warning_ header is added to the response.The header will provide information on the source of the failure:`"Line 1:112: evaluation of [TO_DATETIME(string)] failed, treating result as null. "Only first 20 failures recorded."`A following header will contain the failure reason and the offending value:`"java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: failed to parse date field [1964-06-02 00:00:00]with format [yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS'Z']"`If the input parameter is of a numeric type,its value will be interpreted as milliseconds since the {wikipedia}/Unix_time[Unix epoch]. For example:[source.merge.styled,esql]----include::{esql-specs}/date.csv-spec[tag=to_datetime-int]----[%header.monospaced.styled,format=dsv,separator=|]|===include::{esql-specs}/date.csv-spec[tag=to_datetime-int-result]|===
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