Reputation: 39374
I have to format the date string (UTC format) as per device locale settings. For example in India it should display as 08/09/2017 12.23 and in US it should display as 09/08/2017 12.23, Based on different region setting it should display the date format accordingly.
Upvotes: 5
Views: 2465
Reputation: 87
The answer of @Rob above didn't work for me, but it showed the right direction. It turned out the formatterBehavior
of the DateFormatter
instance wasn't set properly (it defaults to behavior10_4
, and not to default
. This works for me:
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.formatterBehavior = .default
dateFormatter.dateStyle = .medium
dateFormatter.timeStyle = .none
let dateString = dateFormatter.string(from: Date())
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 437472
The best approach is to not set dateFormat
, but rather set dateStyle
and timeStyle
.
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.timeZone = TimeZone(secondsFromGMT: 0)
formatter.dateStyle = .medium
formatter.timeStyle = .medium
let string = formatter.string(from: Date())
If none of those styles are quite correct, then, go ahead and use dateFormat
, but rather than a string literal, set dateFormat
using setLocalizedDateFormatFromTemplate(_:)
.
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.timeZone = TimeZone(secondsFromGMT: 0)
formatter.setLocalizedDateFormatFromTemplate("ddMMyyyy HH:mm")
let string = formatter.string(from: Date())
That displays 09/08/2017 19:42
for US users, 08/09/2017 19:42
for United Kingdom users, and 08.09.2017 19:42
for German users
Upvotes: 13