Reputation: 1397
I have a value stored in variable of type System.TimeSpan
as follows.
System.TimeSpan storedTime = 03:00:00;
Can I re-store it in another variable of type String
as follows?
String displayValue = "03:00 AM";
And if storedTime
variable has the value of
storedTime = 16:00:00;
then it should be converted to:
String displayValue = "04:00 PM";
Upvotes: 108
Views: 223990
Reputation: 314
To avoid timespan format limitations, convert to datetime. Simplest expression would be:
// Where value is a TimeSpan...
(new DateTime() + value).ToString("hh:mm tt");
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 429
Because this situation is as annoying as it is common... I created a helper class, which I have released in a NuGet package. This could be a private method and can be used in MVC views as well as in back-end C# code.
public static string AsTimeOfDay(TimeSpan timeSpan, TimeSpanFormat timeSpanFormat = TimeSpanFormat.AmPm)
{
int hours = timeSpan.Hours;
int minutes = timeSpan.Minutes;
string AmOrPm = "AM";
string returnValue = string.Empty;
if (timeSpanFormat == TimeSpanFormat.AmPm)
{
if (hours >= 12)
{
AmOrPm = "PM";
}
if (hours > 12)
{
hours -= 12;
}
TimeSpan timeSpanAmPm = new TimeSpan(hours, minutes, 0);
returnValue = timeSpanAmPm.ToString(@"h\:mm") + " " + AmOrPm;
}
else
{
returnValue = timeSpan.ToString(@"h\:mm");
}
return returnValue;
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1382
Very simple by using the string format
on .ToSTring("") :
if you use "hh" ->> The hour, using a 12-hour clock from 01 to 12.
if you use "HH" ->> The hour, using a 24-hour clock from 00 to 23.
if you add "tt" ->> The Am/Pm designator.
exemple converting from 23:12 to 11:12 Pm :
DateTime d = new DateTime(1, 1, 1, 23, 12, 0);
var res = d.ToString("hh:mm tt"); // this show 11:12 Pm
var res2 = d.ToString("HH:mm"); // this show 23:12
Console.WriteLine(res);
Console.WriteLine(res2);
Console.Read();
wait a second, there is a catch, the system Culture !!, the same code executed on windows set to different language especially with different culture language will generate different result.
for example in windows set to Arabic language the result Will be like this :
// 23:12 م
م means Evening (first letter of مساء) .
in windows set to German language i think it will show // 23:12 du.
you can change between different format on windows control panel under windows regional and language -> current format (combobox) and change... apply it, do a rebuild (execute) of your app and watch what i'm talking about.
so how can you force showing Am and Pm prefix in English event if the culture of the current system isn't set to English ?
easy just by adding two lines ->
the first step add using System.Globalization;
on top of your code
and modify the previous code to be like this :
DateTime d = new DateTime(1, 1, 1, 23, 12, 0);
var res = d.ToString("HH:mm tt", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture); // this show 11:12 Pm
InvariantCulture => using default English Format.
another question I want to have the pm to be in Arabic or specific language, even if I use windows set to English (or other language) regional format?
Solution for Arabic Exemple :
DateTime d = new DateTime(1, 1, 1, 23, 12, 0);
var res = d.ToString("HH:mm tt", CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("ar-AE"));
this will show // 23:12 م
event if my system is set to English region format. you can change "ar-AE" if you want to another language format. there is a list for each language.
exemples : ar ar-SA Arabic ar-BH ar-BH Arabic (Bahrain) ar-DZ ar-DZ Arabic (Algeria) ar-EG ar-EG Arabic (Egypt) .....
Upvotes: 17
Reputation: 1931
You cannot add AM / PM to a TimeSpan
. You'll anyway have to associate the TimaSpan
value with DateTime
if you want to display the time in 12-hour clock format.
TimeSpan
is not intended to use with a 12-hour clock format, because we are talking about a time interval here.
As it says in the documentation;
A
TimeSpan
object represents a time interval (duration of time or elapsed time) that is measured as a positive or negative number of days, hours, minutes, seconds, and fractions of a second. TheTimeSpan
structure can also be used to represent the time of day, but only if the time is unrelated to a particular date. Otherwise, theDateTime
orDateTimeOffset
structure should be used instead.
Also Microsoft Docs describes as follows;
A
TimeSpan
value can be represented as[-]d.hh:mm:ss.ff
, where the optional minus sign indicates a negative time interval, thed
component is days,hh
is hours as measured on a 24-hour clock,mm
is minutes,ss
is seconds, andff
is fractions of a second.
So in this case, you can display using AM/PM as follows.
TimeSpan storedTime = new TimeSpan(03,00,00);
string displayValue = new DateTime().Add(storedTime).ToString("hh:mm tt");
Side note :
Also should note that the TimeOfDay property of DateTime
is a TimeSpan
, where it represents
a time interval that represents the fraction of the day that has elapsed since midnight.
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 1214
You can try this:
string timeexample= string.Format("{0:hh:mm:ss tt}", DateTime.Now);
you can remove hh or mm or ss or tt according your need where hh is hour in 12 hr formate, mm is minutes,ss is seconds,and tt is AM/PM.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 763
Parse timespan to DateTime. For Example.
//The time will be "8.30 AM" or "10.00 PM" or any time like this format.
public TimeSpan GetTimeSpanValue(string displayValue)
{
DateTime dateTime = DateTime.Now;
if (displayValue.StartsWith("10") || displayValue.StartsWith("11") || displayValue.StartsWith("12"))
dateTime = DateTime.ParseExact(displayValue, "hh:mm tt", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
else
dateTime = DateTime.ParseExact(displayValue, "h:mm tt", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
return dateTime.TimeOfDay;
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 33098
Doing some piggybacking off existing answers here:
public static string ToShortTimeSafe(this TimeSpan timeSpan)
{
return new DateTime().Add(timeSpan).ToShortTimeString();
}
public static string ToShortTimeSafe(this TimeSpan? timeSpan)
{
return timeSpan == null ? string.Empty : timeSpan.Value.ToShortTimeSafe();
}
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 13150
You can do this by adding your timespan to the date.
TimeSpan timespan = new TimeSpan(03,00,00);
DateTime time = DateTime.Today.Add(timespan);
string displayTime = time.ToString("hh:mm tt"); // It will give "03:00 AM"
Upvotes: 231
Reputation: 273209
string displayValue="03:00 AM";
This is a point in time , not a duration (TimeSpan).
So something is wrong with your basic design or assumptions.
If you do want to use it, you'll have to convert it to a DateTime (point in time) first. You can format a DateTime without the date part, that would be your desired string.
TimeSpan t1 = ...;
DateTime d1 = DateTime.Today + t1; // any date will do
string result = d1.ToString("hh:mm:ss tt");
storeTime variable can have value like
storeTime=16:00:00;
No, it can have a value of 4 o'clock but the representation is binary, a TimeSpan cannot record the difference between 16:00
and 4 pm
.
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 14521
You will need to get a DateTime
object from your TimeSpan
and then you can format it easily.
One possible solution is adding the timespan to any date with zero time value.
var timespan = new TimeSpan(3, 0, 0);
var output = new DateTime().Add(timespan).ToString("hh:mm tt");
The output value will be "03:00 AM"
(for english locale).
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 10638
At first, you need to convert time span to DateTime structure:
var dt = new DateTime(2000, 12, 1, timeSpan.Hours, timeSpan.Minutes, timeSpan.Seconds)
Then you need to convert the value to string with Short Time format
var result = dt.ToString("t"); // Convert to string using Short Time format
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 223237
Parse timespan to DateTime and then use Format ("hh:mm:tt"). For example.
TimeSpan ts = new TimeSpan(16, 00, 00);
DateTime dtTemp = DateTime.ParseExact(ts.ToString(), "HH:mm:ss", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
string str = dtTemp.ToString("hh:mm tt");
str
will be:
str = "04:00 PM"
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 460068
You can add the TimeSpan
to a DateTime
, for example:
TimeSpan span = TimeSpan.FromHours(16);
DateTime time = DateTime.Today + span;
String result = time.ToString("hh:mm tt");
Demo: http://ideone.com/veJ6tT
04:00 PM
Standard Date and Time Format Strings
Upvotes: 14