Mike Baxter
Mike Baxter

Reputation: 7268

No DateTime?.ToString(string) overload?

I am aware of the standard procedure for displaying a DateTime in a custom format, like so:

MessageBox.Show(dateSent.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy hh:mm:ss"));

However, when I change the variable from a DateTime to a DateTime? to accept null values, I lose the definition for the ToString(string) overload. I need to use DateTime? as I am reading from a database which potentially has null values - if the field in the database has a null value, then I need to assign the variable a null value too.

So I have two questions:

1) Out of curiosity, does anyone know if there is a reason why DateTime? does not contain an overload for ToString(string)?

2) Could anyone suggest an alternative method for what I am trying to achieve?

Upvotes: 7

Views: 3429

Answers (3)

keyboardP
keyboardP

Reputation: 69372

Instead of having to manually perform a null check every time, you can write an extension method.

 public static string ToStringFormat(this DateTime? dt, string format)
 {
      if(dt.HasValue) 
         return dt.Value.ToString(format);
      else
         return "";
 }

And use it like this (with whatever string format you want)

 Console.WriteLine(myNullableDateTime.ToStringFormat("dd/MM/yyyy hh:mm:ss"));

Upvotes: 7

GLlompart
GLlompart

Reputation: 271

You can still use

variableName.Value.ToString(customFormat);

Upvotes: 2

MarcinJuraszek
MarcinJuraszek

Reputation: 125640

DateTime? is syntactic sugar for Nullable<DateTime> and that's why it don't have ToString(format) overload.

However, you can access underlying DateTime struct using Value property. But before that use HasValue to check, if the value exists.

MessageBox.Show(dateSent.HasValue ? dateSent.Value.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy hh:mm:ss") : string.Empty)

Upvotes: 11

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