Reputation: 1314
Suppose I have a simple String, extracted from an array of strings (representing dates) -
var myDateString = "2015-11-25 04:31:32.0"
Now, I want to convert it to a string that looks like Nov 25, 2015.
For that, I assume I need to -
I've been trying this in Playground, but have been unable to solve such a simple problem.
Here is what I have tried -
Line 1| var dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
Line 2| dateFormatter.locale = NSLocale.currentLocale()
Line 3| dateFormatter.dateFormat = "YYYY-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.A"
Line 4| let somedate = dateFormatter.dateFromString(str)
Line 5| let somedateString = dateFormatter.stringFromDate(somedate!)
In the sidebar of Xcode, line 4 prints "Nov 25, 2015, 12:00 AM"
, but when I try to print a string from somedate
, I get "2015-11-25 00:00:00.0"
.
I haven't found a single proper explanation of NSDates anywhere.
This was so much easier in Java with parse()
and format()
functions for Dates.
Upvotes: 7
Views: 18336
Reputation: 5554
Updated for Swift 3.0
You need two date formatters - one to make sense of your input string and convert to a NSDate, and a different formatter to create the output string
let myDateString = "2016-01-01 04:31:32.0"
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.A"
let myDate = dateFormatter.date(from: myDateString)!
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "MMM dd, YYYY"
let somedateString = dateFormatter.string(from: myDate)
I have updated this answer to change the date formatter from YYYY to yyyy. In most cases, there will be no difference between the two, but YYYY may treat the first few days of the year as being part of the last complete week of the previous year.
The Apple developer guides explain it like this.
A common mistake is to use YYYY. yyyy specifies the calendar year whereas YYYY specifies the year (of “Week of Year”), used in the ISO year-week calendar. In most cases, yyyy and YYYY yield the same number, however they may be different. Typically you should use the calendar year.
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 3698
You will need two date formatters as others suggested. Additionally, one of your issues is that you are using .A instead of .S for the fractional seconds. (See the link to Unicode Date Format Specification as pointed out in @MartinR's comment)
.A is Milliseconds in day
.S is Fractional Second
The the following in a Playground:
let dateString = "2015-11-25 04:01:32.0"
let dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.S" // Note: S is fractional second
let dateFromString = dateFormatter.dateFromString(dateString) // "Nov 25, 2015, 4:31 AM" as NSDate
let dateFormatter2 = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter2.dateFormat = "MMM d, yyyy"
let stringFromDate = dateFormatter2.stringFromDate(dateFromString!) // "Nov 25, 2015" as String
Upvotes: 4