|  | @@ -196,11 +196,11 @@ Many times, when updating a record, you want to use the unique rule, but exclude
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  #### Validate that a date attribute is before a given date:
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -	'birthdate' => 'before:1986-28-05';
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +	'birthdate' => 'before:1986-05-28';
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  #### Validate that a date attribute is after a given date:
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -	'birthdate' => 'after:1986-28-05';
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +	'birthdate' => 'after:1986-05-28';
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  > **Note:** The **before** and **after** validation rules use the **strtotime** PHP function to convert your date to something the rule can understand.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
	
		
			
				|  | @@ -450,4 +450,4 @@ Next, let's take our "awesome" rule and define it in our new class:
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  Notice that the method is named using the **validate_rule** naming convention. The rule is named "awesome" so the method must be named "validate_awesome". This is one way in which registering your custom rules and extending the Validator class are different. Validator classes simply need to return true or false. That's it!
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -Keep in mind that you'll still need to create a custom message for any validation rules that you create.  The method for doing so is the same no matter how you define your rule!
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +Keep in mind that you'll still need to create a custom message for any validation rules that you create.  The method for doing so is the same no matter how you define your rule!
 |