Reliably checking whether NSDate falls within given hour, day or week - objective-c

I need to take a stored NSDate and reliably determine whether it falls within the current moment's hour, day or week. I seem to have hacked together a solution, but not having solved this problem before, am not entirely confident that it's a reliable one.
Will this survive user-set 12 vs 24 hour time? the date formatting guide indicates that this user setting can lead to some unanticipated date behavior: "In iOS, the user can override the default AM/PM versus 24-hour time setting. This may cause NSDateFormatter to rewrite the format string you set."
What about the basic code pattern for this problem? Does this code seem to reliably serve its purpose? I hate to post a "check my code" sort of question, but it's an unfamiliar-enough problem to me, and tricky enough to rigorously test, that it seemed justified. NSDateFormatter is also relatively new to me; another motivation for the question.
NOTE: The main source of my nervousness is that converting dates to strings and then doing a string compare seems an inherently fragile method of solving this problem. But it's the best I could come up with.
Quick reference: the dateFormats I used for each of the three cases were:
dateFormat = #"yyyyMMddHH"; // For "this hour" check
dateFormat = #"yyyyMMdd"; // For "today" check
dateFormat = #"yyyyww"; // For "this week" check
Thanks! Code Follows:
- (BOOL)didThisCycle {
// Case 1: hourly; Case 2: daily; Case 3: weekly
BOOL did = NO;
NSDate *now = [NSDate date];
NSDate *lastDid = [self.didDates lastObject];
if (![lastDid isKindOfClass:[NSDate class]]) { // Crash protection
return NO;
}
int type = [self.goalType intValue];
switch (type) {
case 1:
{
// If hourly check hour
NSDateFormatter *formatter = [[[NSDateFormatter alloc] init] autorelease];
formatter.dateFormat = #"yyyyMMddHH";
NSString *nowString = [formatter stringFromDate:now];
NSString *lastDidString = [formatter stringFromDate:lastDid];
if ([nowString isEqualToString:lastDidString]) {
did = YES;
} else {
did = NO;
}
break;
}
case 2:
{
// If daily check day
NSDateFormatter *formatter = [[[NSDateFormatter alloc] init] autorelease];
formatter.dateFormat = #"yyyyMMdd";
NSString *nowString = [formatter stringFromDate:now];
NSString *lastDidString = [formatter stringFromDate:lastDid];
if ([nowString isEqualToString:lastDidString]) {
did = YES;
} else {
did = NO;
}
break;
}
case 3:
{
// If weekly check week
NSDateFormatter *formatter = [[[NSDateFormatter alloc] init] autorelease];
formatter.dateFormat = #"yyyyww";
NSString *nowString = [formatter stringFromDate:now];
NSString *lastDidString = [formatter stringFromDate:lastDid];
if ([nowString isEqualToString:lastDidString]) {
did = YES;
} else {
did = NO;
}
break;
}
default:
{
did = NO;
break;
}
}
return did;
}

Use the NSDateComponents class, like so:
NSDate *someDate = // whatever
NSDate *now = [NSDate date];
NSDateComponents *thenComponents = [[NSCalendar currentCalendar] components:NSHourCalendarUnit|NSDayCalendarUnit|NSMonthCalendarUnit|NSYearCalendarUnit fromDate:someDate];
NSDateComponents *nowComponents = [[NSCalendar currentCalendar] components:NSHourCalendarUnit|NSDayCalendarUnit|NSMonthCalendarUnit|NSYearCalendarUnit fromDate:now];
if([thenComponents year] == [nowComponents year] && [thenComponents month] == [nowComponents month] && [thenComponents day] == [nowComponents day] && [thenComponents hour] == [nowComponents hour])
{
// hooray
}
Remove the “hour” component if you just want to check the day, or remove both that and “day” (and replace with NSWeekCalendarUnit and the -week method) to check the week.

Related

Comparing two dates in Objective-C [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How to compare two NSDates: Which is more recent?
(13 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
I need to compare the current date/time against user selected date/time.
Below is my code snippet
-(IBAction)btnSaveTouched:(id)sender {
NSDate *today = [NSDate date];
NSDateFormatter *formatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[formatter setDateFormat:#"yyyy-MM-dd H:mm"];
NSString *formatterDate = [formatter stringFromDate: today];
NSComparisonResult comparisionResult1 = [self.paramSchedule1StartSQLDateString compare:formatterDate];
if (comparisionResult1 == NSOrderedAscending) {
UIAlertView *alert = [[UIAlertView alloc] initWithTitle:#"Error" message:#"Viewing schedule must be after current time." delegate:self cancelButtonTitle:#"OK" otherButtonTitles:nil];
[alert show];
return;
}
NSLog(#"comparisionResult1 %d", comparisionResult1);
}
After btnSaveTouched(UIButton) is tap, the date/time will be store into the database and return back to the screen. (view controller where user select the date/time)
However, when I tried to compare another date/time, the alert will be show even though I selected date/time later then the current date/time.
After NSLog the comparsionResult1, the value is 1 for the second time checking always.
I tried to do this NSComparsionResult comparisionResult1 = 0; but it's not working properly. Is there any ways to go about doing this?
Please advise.
Thanks
Comparison between dates you need to be careful, expecially If you compare with NSString, you must make sure both dates are arranged, and you need to be careful with both formats..So i recomend you compare two NSDate.
Sample:
NSDate *date1 = //…
NSDate *date2 = //…
switch ([date1 compare:date2]) {
case NSOrderedAscending:
//Do your logic when date1 > date2
break;
case NSOrderedDescending:
//Do your logic when date1 < date2
break;
case NSOrderedSame:
//Do your logic when date1 = date2
break;
}
Of course, you can implement a category for NSDate. But already exists, and i like to use this one: NSDate Category, witch you can edit and customize as you wish.
Try this code for any comparison between dates... You should not compare date in the form of string. Compare the dates before conversion to string. Convert the self.paramSchedule1StartSQLDateString into date format using dateFromString function of the formatter by specifying the exact date format as that of the dateString. Then compare the dates using following function.
NSDate *today = [NSDate date]; // current date
NSDate *newDate = self.paramSchedule1StartSQLDateString; // other date
NSComparisonResult result;
result = [today compare:newDate]; // comparing two dates
if(result == NSOrderedAscending)
NSLog(#"today is less");
else if(result == NSOrderedDescending)
NSLog(#"newDate is less");
else if(result == NSOrderedSame)
NSLog(#"Both dates are same");
else
NSLog(#"Date cannot be compared");
NSDateFormatter *dateFormatter = [[[NSDateFormatter alloc] init] autorelease];
[dateFormatter setDateFormat:#"yyyy-MM-dd"];
NSDate *date1 = [dateFormatter dateFromString:TodayDate];
NSDateFormatter *dateFormatte = [[[NSDateFormatter alloc] init] autorelease];
[dateFormatte setDateFormat:#"yyyy-MM-dd"];
NSDate *date2 = [dateFormatte dateFromString:CompareDate];
unsigned int unitFlags = NSDayCalendarUnit;
NSCalendar *gregorian = [[NSCalendar alloc]initWithCalendarIdentifier:NSGregorianCalendar];
NSDateComponents *comps = [gregorian components:unitFlags fromDate:date1 toDate:date2 options:0];
int days = [comps day];
NSLog(#"%d",days);

NSDate compare is not working well

I've read all the questions and answer and all the tutorial about this subject, but for some reason it's not working for me. always showing me that the two dates are the same date!
Please some one help me to figure it out, I just want to check if one is bigger than the other (including date and time - without seconds) or if they are equal.
This is my code:
- (BOOL)isEndDateIsBiggerThanCurrectDate:(NSDate *)checkEndDate
{
NSString *endd = [NSDateFormatter localizedStringFromDate:checkEndDate
dateStyle:NSDateFormatterShortStyle
timeStyle:NSDateFormatterShortStyle];
NSString *curreeeent = [NSDateFormatter localizedStringFromDate:[NSDate date]
dateStyle:NSDateFormatterShortStyle
timeStyle:NSDateFormatterShortStyle];
NSDateFormatter * df = [[NSDateFormatter alloc]init];;
NSDate * newCurrent = [df dateFromString:endd];
NSDate * newEnd = [df dateFromString:curreeeent];
switch ([newCurrent compare:newEnd])
{
case NSOrderedAscending:
return YES;
break;
case NSOrderedSame:
return NO;
break;
case NSOrderedDescending:
return NO;
break;
}
}
Thank you very much!
For this, you have to use NSCalender.
NSCalendar *calendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSInteger desiredComponents = (NSYearCalendarUnit | NSMonthCalendarUnit | NSDayCalendarUnit | NSHourCalendarUnit | NSMinuteCalendarUnit);
NSDateComponents *firstComponents = [calendar components:desiredComponents fromDate:[NSDate date]];
NSDateComponents *secondComponents = [calendar components:desiredComponents fromDate: checkEndDate];
NSDate *first = [calendar dateFromComponents:firstComponents];
NSDate *second = [calendar dateFromComponents:secondComponents];
NSComparisonResult result = [first compare:second];
if (result == NSOrderedAscending) {
//checkEndDate is before now
} else if (result == NSOrderedDescending) {
//checkEndDate is after now
} else {
//both are same
}
You should really be using time intervals rather than converting between dates and strings.
Something like the following should suit your needs:
//current time
NSDate *now = [NSDate date];
//time in the future
NSDate *distantFuture = [NSDate distantFuture];
//gather time interval
if([now timeIntervalSinceDate:distantFuture] > 0)
{
//huzzah!
}
I've got the answer, just checking the exact time between two dates and compare it.
- (BOOL)isEndDateIsSmallerThanCurrent:(NSDate *)checkEndDate
{
NSDate* enddate = checkEndDate;
NSDate* currentdate = [NSDate date];
NSTimeInterval distanceBetweenDates = [enddate timeIntervalSinceDate:currentdate];
double secondsInMinute = 60;
NSInteger secondsBetweenDates = distanceBetweenDates / secondsInMinute;
if (secondsBetweenDates == 0)
return YES;
else if (secondsBetweenDates < 0)
return YES;
else
return NO;
}
Why don't you change the dates into time interval since 1970 and sort by that. Extremely simple number compare, much quicker than string compare, and they will always sort correct, not like 1,10,11,2,21,22,3,....
NSDate *now = [NSDate date];
NSTimeInterval ti = [now timeIntervalSince1970];
Thats it. No new object creations, much quicker and much less taxing on the cpu.
See here how you get rid of seconds, but it is easy because you have numbers, for seconds. See here How to set seconds to zero for NSDate

iOS: Compare two dates

I have a NSDate that I must compare with other two NSDate and I try with NSOrderAscending and NSOrderDescending but if my date is equal at other two dates?
Example: if I have a myDate = 24/05/2011 and other two that are one = 24/05/2011 and two 24/05/2011 what can I use?
According to Apple documentation of NSDate compare:
Returns an NSComparisonResult value that indicates the temporal ordering of the receiver and another given date.
- (NSComparisonResult)compare:(NSDate *)anotherDate
Parameters anotherDate
The date with which to compare the
receiver. This value must not be nil.
If the value is nil, the behavior is
undefined and may change in future
versions of Mac OS X.
Return Value
If:
The receiver and anotherDate are
exactly equal to each other,
NSOrderedSame
The receiver is later in
time than anotherDate,
NSOrderedDescending
The receiver is
earlier in time than anotherDate,
NSOrderedAscending
In other words:
if ([date1 compare:date2] == NSOrderedSame) ...
Note that it might be easier in your particular case to read and write this :
if ([date2 isEqualToDate:date2]) ...
See Apple Documentation about this one.
After searching, I've got to conclusion that the best way of doing it is like this:
- (BOOL)isEndDateIsSmallerThanCurrent:(NSDate *)checkEndDate
{
NSDate* enddate = checkEndDate;
NSDate* currentdate = [NSDate date];
NSTimeInterval distanceBetweenDates = [enddate timeIntervalSinceDate:currentdate];
double secondsInMinute = 60;
NSInteger secondsBetweenDates = distanceBetweenDates / secondsInMinute;
if (secondsBetweenDates == 0)
return YES;
else if (secondsBetweenDates < 0)
return YES;
else
return NO;
}
You can change it to difference between hours also.
If you want to compare date with format of dd/MM/yyyy only, you need to add below lines between NSDate* currentdate = [NSDate date]; && NSTimeInterval distance
NSDateFormatter *dateFormatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[dateFormatter setDateFormat:#"dd/MM/yyyy"];
[dateFormatter setLocale:[[[NSLocale alloc] initWithLocaleIdentifier:#"en_US"]
autorelease]];
NSString *stringDate = [dateFormatter stringFromDate:[NSDate date]];
currentdate = [dateFormatter dateFromString:stringDate];
I take it you are asking what the return value is in the comparison function.
If the dates are equal then returning NSOrderedSame
If ascending ( 2nd arg > 1st arg ) return NSOrderedAscending
If descending ( 2nd arg < 1st arg ) return NSOrderedDescending
I don't know exactly if you have asked this but if you only want to compare the date component of a NSDate you have to use NSCalendar and NSDateComponents to remove the time component.
Something like this should work as a category for NSDate:
- (NSComparisonResult)compareDateOnly:(NSDate *)otherDate {
NSUInteger dateFlags = NSYearCalendarUnit|NSMonthCalendarUnit|NSDayCalendarUnit;
NSCalendar *gregorianCalendar = [[[NSCalendar alloc] initWithCalendarIdentifier:NSGregorianCalendar] autorelease];
NSDateComponents *selfComponents = [gregorianCalendar components:dateFlags fromDate:self];
NSDate *selfDateOnly = [gregorianCalendar dateFromComponents:selfComponents];
NSDateComponents *otherCompents = [gregorianCalendar components:dateFlags fromDate:otherDate];
NSDate *otherDateOnly = [gregorianCalendar dateFromComponents:otherCompents];
return [selfDateOnly compare:otherDateOnly];
}
NSDate actually represents a time interval in seconds since a reference date (1st Jan 2000 UTC I think). Internally, a double precision floating point number is used so two arbitrary dates are highly unlikely to compare equal even if they are on the same day. If you want to see if a particular date falls on a particular day, you probably need to use NSDateComponents. e.g.
NSDateComponents* dateComponents = [[NSDateComponents alloc] init];
[dateComponents setYear: 2011];
[dateComponents setMonth: 5];
[dateComponents setDay: 24];
/*
* Construct two dates that bracket the day you are checking.
* Use the user's current calendar. I think this takes care of things like daylight saving time.
*/
NSCalendar* calendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSDate* startOfDate = [calendar dateFromComponents: dateComponents];
NSDateComponents* oneDay = [[NSDateComponents alloc] init];
[oneDay setDay: 1];
NSDate* endOfDate = [calendar dateByAddingComponents: oneDay toDate: startOfDate options: 0];
/*
* Compare the date with the start of the day and the end of the day.
*/
NSComparisonResult startCompare = [startOfDate compare: myDate];
NSComparisonResult endCompare = [endOfDate compare: myDate];
if (startCompare != NSOrderedDescending && endCompare == NSOrderedDescending)
{
// we are on the right date
}
Check the following Function for date comparison first of all create two NSDate objects and pass to the function:
Add the bellow lines of code in viewDidload or according to your scenario.
-(void)testDateComaparFunc{
NSString *getTokon_Time1 = #"2016-05-31 03:19:05 +0000";
NSString *getTokon_Time2 = #"2016-05-31 03:18:05 +0000";
NSDateFormatter *dateFormatter=[NSDateFormatter new];
[dateFormatter setDateFormat:#"yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss Z"];
NSDate *tokonExpireDate1=[dateFormatter dateFromString:getTokon_Time1];
NSDate *tokonExpireDate2=[dateFormatter dateFromString:getTokon_Time2];
BOOL isTokonValid = [self dateComparision:tokonExpireDate1 andDate2:tokonExpireDate2];}
here is the function
-(BOOL)dateComparision:(NSDate*)date1 andDate2:(NSDate*)date2{
BOOL isTokonValid;
if ([date1 compare:date2] == NSOrderedDescending) {
//"date1 is later than date2
isTokonValid = YES;
} else if ([date1 compare:date2] == NSOrderedAscending) {
//date1 is earlier than date2
isTokonValid = NO;
} else {
//dates are the same
isTokonValid = NO;
}
return isTokonValid;}
Simply change the date and test above function :)

iPhone simple method definition and calling the current date/time

I'm very new to iPhone development, and I'm trying to write a function which will accept one parameter, and return the current date/month and store it in a variable.
But I'm getting a (null) value with NSLog.
Method:
-(NSString *) getNowDateMonth:(NSString *)type {
NSDate *now = [[NSDate alloc] init];
if (type==#"month") {
NSDateFormatter *monthFormat = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[monthFormat setDateFormat:#"MM"];
NSString *theMonth = [monthFormat stringFromDate:now];
[monthFormat release];
return theMonth;
} else if (type==#"day") {
NSDateFormatter *dateFormat = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[dateFormat setDateFormat:#"dd"];
NSString *theDate = [dateFormat stringFromDate:now];
//int setDate = theDate;
[dateFormat release];
return theDate;
}
[now release];
return NULL;
}
Calling the function to get value:
NSString *month = [self getNowDateMonth:#"month"];
NSLog(#"%#", month);
Am I going about this the right way?
First of all, compare the strings using [#"month" isEqualToString:type], because two strings containing the same text ("month") may not be equal by the == operator. == checks if they're the same string object, not strings object with the same contents.
Second of all, you're leaking the date when returning the month or day (not releasing now). You should use [NSDate date]; instead of [[NSDate alloc] init].
To sum up, a suggested better version of this method would be:
-(NSString *) getNowDateMonth:(NSString *)type {
NSDate *now = [NSDate date];
if ([#"month" isEqualToString:type]) {
NSDateFormatter *monthFormat = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[monthFormat setDateFormat:#"MM"];
NSString *theMonth = [monthFormat stringFromDate:now];
[monthFormat release];
return theMonth;
} else if ([#"day" isEqualToString:type]) {
NSDateFormatter *dateFormat = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[dateFormat setDateFormat:#"dd"];
NSString *theDate = [dateFormat stringFromDate:now];
[dateFormat release];
return theDate;
} else {
return nil;
}
}
Also, there are a few other points that can be taken into consideration to improve this method:
do not use NSString as type; use an enum
do not allocate NSDateFormatter on each call to the method; instead use a static variable in the method
You want to use NSDateComponents to reliably and easily extract unit information i.e. month, day, week etc from an NSDate.
See Date and Time Programming Guide for Cocoa.
Dates are a deceptively complex programing problem so Cocoa has a fully developed set of classes for dealing with them. However, the learning curve is a bit steep.

Comparing dates [duplicate]

I have two dates: 2009-05-11 and the current date. I want to check whether the given date is the current date or not. How is this possible.
Cocoa has couple of methods for this:
in NSDate
– isEqualToDate:
– earlierDate:
– laterDate:
– compare:
When you use - (NSComparisonResult)compare:(NSDate *)anotherDate ,you get back one of these:
The receiver and anotherDate are exactly equal to each other, NSOrderedSame
The receiver is later in time than anotherDate, NSOrderedDescending
The receiver is earlier in time than anotherDate, NSOrderedAscending.
example:
NSDate * now = [NSDate date];
NSDate * mile = [[NSDate alloc] initWithString:#"2001-03-24 10:45:32 +0600"];
NSComparisonResult result = [now compare:mile];
NSLog(#"%#", now);
NSLog(#"%#", mile);
switch (result)
{
case NSOrderedAscending: NSLog(#"%# is in future from %#", mile, now); break;
case NSOrderedDescending: NSLog(#"%# is in past from %#", mile, now); break;
case NSOrderedSame: NSLog(#"%# is the same as %#", mile, now); break;
default: NSLog(#"erorr dates %#, %#", mile, now); break;
}
[mile release];
Here buddy. This function will match your date with any specific date and will be able to tell whether they match or not. You can also modify the components to match your requirements.
- (BOOL)isSameDay:(NSDate*)date1 otherDay:(NSDate*)date2 {
NSCalendar* calendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
unsigned unitFlags = NSYearCalendarUnit | NSMonthCalendarUnit | NSDayCalendarUnit;
NSDateComponents* comp1 = [calendar components:unitFlags fromDate:date1];
NSDateComponents* comp2 = [calendar components:unitFlags fromDate:date2];
return [comp1 day] == [comp2 day] &&
[comp1 month] == [comp2 month] &&
[comp1 year] == [comp2 year];}
Regards,
Naveed Butt
NSDate *today = [NSDate date]; // it will give you current date
NSDate *newDate = [NSDate dateWithString:#"xxxxxx"]; // your date
NSComparisonResult result;
//has three possible values: NSOrderedSame,NSOrderedDescending, NSOrderedAscending
result = [today compare:newDate]; // comparing two dates
if(result==NSOrderedAscending)
NSLog(#"today is less");
else if(result==NSOrderedDescending)
NSLog(#"newDate is less");
else
NSLog(#"Both dates are same");
There are other ways that you may use to compare an NSDate objects. Each of the
methods will be more efficient at certain tasks. I have chosen the compare method
because it will handle most of your basic date comparison needs.
This category offers a neat way to compare NSDates:
#import <Foundation/Foundation.h>
#interface NSDate (Compare)
-(BOOL) isLaterThanOrEqualTo:(NSDate*)date;
-(BOOL) isEarlierThanOrEqualTo:(NSDate*)date;
-(BOOL) isLaterThan:(NSDate*)date;
-(BOOL) isEarlierThan:(NSDate*)date;
//- (BOOL)isEqualToDate:(NSDate *)date; already part of the NSDate API
#end
And the implementation:
#import "NSDate+Compare.h"
#implementation NSDate (Compare)
-(BOOL) isLaterThanOrEqualTo:(NSDate*)date {
return !([self compare:date] == NSOrderedAscending);
}
-(BOOL) isEarlierThanOrEqualTo:(NSDate*)date {
return !([self compare:date] == NSOrderedDescending);
}
-(BOOL) isLaterThan:(NSDate*)date {
return ([self compare:date] == NSOrderedDescending);
}
-(BOOL) isEarlierThan:(NSDate*)date {
return ([self compare:date] == NSOrderedAscending);
}
#end
Simple to use:
if([aDateYouWantToCompare isEarlierThanOrEqualTo:[NSDate date]]) // [NSDate date] is now
{
// do your thing ...
}
If you make both dates NSDates you can use NSDate's compare: method:
NSComparisonResult result = [Date2 compare:Date1];
if(result==NSOrderedAscending)
NSLog(#"Date1 is in the future");
else if(result==NSOrderedDescending)
NSLog(#"Date1 is in the past");
else
NSLog(#"Both dates are the same");
You can take a look at the docs here.
By this method also you can compare two dates
NSDate * dateOne = [NSDate date];
NSDate * dateTwo = [NSDate date];
if([dateOne compare:dateTwo] == NSOrderedAscending)
{
}
The best way I found was to check the difference between the given date and today:
NSCalendar* calendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSDate* now = [NSDate date];
int differenceInDays =
[calendar ordinalityOfUnit:NSCalendarUnitDay inUnit:NSCalendarUnitEra forDate:date] -
[calendar ordinalityOfUnit:NSCalendarUnitDay inUnit:NSCalendarUnitEra forDate:now];
According to Listing 13 of Calendrical Calculations in Apple's Date and Time Programming Guide [NSCalendar ordinalityOfUnit:NSDayCalendarUnit inUnit: NSEraCalendarUnit forDate:myDate] gives you the number of midnights since the start of the era.
This way it's easy to check whether the date is yesterday, today, or tomorrow.
switch (differenceInDays) {
case -1:
dayString = #"Yesterday";
break;
case 0:
dayString = #"Today";
break;
case 1:
dayString = #"Tomorrow";
break;
default: {
NSDateFormatter* dayFormatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[dayFormatter setLocale:usLocale];
[dayFormatter setDateFormat:#"dd MMM"];
dayString = [dayFormatter stringFromDate: date];
break;
}
}
NSDateFormatter *df= [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[df setDateFormat:#"yyyy-MM-dd"];
NSDate *dt1 = [[NSDate alloc] init];
NSDate *dt2 = [[NSDate alloc] init];
dt1=[df dateFromString:#"2011-02-25"];
dt2=[df dateFromString:#"2011-03-25"];
NSComparisonResult result = [dt1 compare:dt2];
switch (result)
{
case NSOrderedAscending: NSLog(#"%# is greater than %#", dt2, dt1); break;
case NSOrderedDescending: NSLog(#"%# is less %#", dt2, dt1); break;
case NSOrderedSame: NSLog(#"%# is equal to %#", dt2, dt1); break;
default: NSLog(#"erorr dates %#, %#", dt2, dt1); break;
}
Enjoy coding......
In Cocoa, to compare dates, use one of isEqualToDate, compare, laterDate, and earlierDate methods on NSDate objects, instantiated with the dates you need.
Documentation:
http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSDate_Class/Reference/Reference.html#//apple_ref/occ/instm/NSDate/isEqualToDate:
http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSDate_Class/Reference/Reference.html#//apple_ref/occ/instm/NSDate/earlierDate:
http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSDate_Class/Reference/Reference.html#//apple_ref/occ/instm/NSDate/laterDate:
http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSDate_Class/Reference/Reference.html#//apple_ref/occ/instm/NSDate/compare:
What you really need is to compare two objects of the same kind.
Create an NSDate out of your string date (#"2009-05-11") :
http://blog.evandavey.com/2008/12/how-to-convert-a-string-to-nsdate.html
If the current date is a string too, make it an NSDate. If its already an NSDate, leave it.
Here's the Swift variant on Pascal's answer:
extension NSDate {
func isLaterThanOrEqualTo(date:NSDate) -> Bool {
return !(self.compare(date) == NSComparisonResult.OrderedAscending)
}
func isEarlierThanOrEqualTo(date:NSDate) -> Bool {
return !(self.compare(date) == NSComparisonResult.OrderedDescending)
}
func isLaterThan(date:NSDate) -> Bool {
return (self.compare(date) == NSComparisonResult.OrderedDescending)
}
func isEarlierThan(date:NSDate) -> Bool {
return (self.compare(date) == NSComparisonResult.OrderedAscending)
}
}
Which can be used as:
self.expireDate.isEarlierThanOrEqualTo(NSDate())
Here's the function from Naveed Rafi's answer converted to Swift if anyone else is looking for it:
func isSameDate(#date1: NSDate, date2: NSDate) -> Bool {
let calendar = NSCalendar()
let date1comp = calendar.components(.YearCalendarUnit | .MonthCalendarUnit | .DayCalendarUnit, fromDate: date1)
let date2comp = calendar.components(.YearCalendarUnit | .MonthCalendarUnit | .DayCalendarUnit, fromDate: date2)
return (date1comp.year == date2comp.year) && (date1comp.month == date2comp.month) && (date1comp.day == date2comp.day)
}
Get Today's Date:
NSDate* date = [NSDate date];
Create a Date From Scratch:
NSDateComponents* comps = [[NSDateComponents alloc]init];
comps.year = 2015;
comps.month = 12;
comps.day = 31;
NSCalendar* calendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSDate* date = [calendar dateFromComponents:comps];
Add a day to a Date:
NSDate* date = [NSDate date];
NSDateComponents* comps = [[NSDateComponents alloc]init];
comps.day = 1;
NSCalendar* calendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSDate* tomorrow = [calendar dateByAddingComponents:comps toDate:date options:nil];
Subtract a day from a Date:
NSDate* date = [NSDate date];
NSDateComponents* comps = [[NSDateComponents alloc]init];
comps.day = -1;
NSCalendar* calendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSDate* yesterday = [calendar dateByAddingComponents:comps toDate:date options:nil];
Convert a Date to a String:
NSDate* date = [NSDate date];
NSDateFormatter* formatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc]init];
formatter.dateFormat = #"MMMM dd, yyyy";
NSString* dateString = [formatter stringFromDate:date];
Convert a String to a Date:
NSDateFormatter* formatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc]init];
formatter.dateFormat = #"MMMM dd, yyyy";
NSDate* date = [formatter dateFromString:#"August 02, 2014"];
Find how many days are in a month:
NSDate* date = [NSDate date];
NSCalendar* cal = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSRange currentRange = [cal rangeOfUnit:NSDayCalendarUnit inUnit:NSMonthCalendarUnit forDate:date];
NSInteger numberOfDays = currentRange.length;
Calculate how much time something took:
NSDate* start = [NSDate date];
for(int i = 0; i < 1000000000; i++);
NSDate* end = [NSDate date];
NSTimeInterval duration = [end timeIntervalSinceDate:start];
Find the Day Of Week for a specific Date:
NSDate* date = [NSDate date];
NSCalendar* cal = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSInteger dow = [cal ordinalityOfUnit:NSWeekdayCalendarUnit inUnit:NSWeekCalendarUnit forDate:date];
Then use NSComparisonResult to compare date.
..
NSString *date = #"2009-05-11"
NSString *nowDate = [[[NSDate date]description]substringToIndex: 10];
if([date isEqualToString: nowDate])
{
// your code
}