Reputation: 25
I'm trying to create a function that returns the number of Dates in a Date Range that are sequential, starting on a specific date.
Example:
StartDate: 9/1/2022
Date Range: 9/1/2022, 9/2/2022, 9/3/2022, 9/4/2022, 9/7/2022
In this scenario the function I'm looking for would return 4.
Assume dates could be unordered and they can roll over into the next month, so with StartDate 9/29/2022:
9/29/2022, 9/30/2022, 10/1/2022, 10/4/2022 would return 3.
I know I can loop through the dates starting at the specific date and check the number of consecutive days, but I'm wondering if there's a clean way to do it with Linq.
Upvotes: 0
Views: 1108
Reputation: 39132
You're either going to sort the dates and find sequential ones, or leave it unsorted and repeatedly iterate over the set looking for a match.
Here's the latter dumb approach, leaving it unsorted and using repeated calls to 'IndexOf`:
public static int CountConsecutiveDays(DateTime startingFrom, List<DateTime> data)
{
int count = 0;
int index = data.IndexOf(startingFrom);
while(index != -1) {
count++;
startingFrom = startingFrom.AddDays(1);
index = data.IndexOf(startingFrom);
}
return count;
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3700
To count the number of consecutive dates in a given date range.
TakeWhile
method to take a sequence of consecutive dates from the start of the list.public class Program
{
private static void Main(string[] args)
{
var dateRange = "9/29/2022, 9/30/2022, 10/1/2022, 10/4/2022";
var dates = dateRange
.Split(", ")
.Select(dateStr =>
{
var dateData = dateStr.Split("/");
var month = int.Parse(dateData[0]);
var day = int.Parse(dateData[1]);
var year = int.Parse(dateData[2]);
return new DateTime(year, month, day);
})
.OrderBy(x => x)
.ToList();
var consecutiveDatesCounter = dates
.TakeWhile((date, i) => i == 0 || dates[i - 1].AddDays(1) == date)
.Count();
Console.WriteLine(consecutiveDatesCounter);
}
}
Output: 3
Demo: https://dotnetfiddle.net/tYdWvz
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 3701
var dates = new List<DateTime>() {new DateTime(2014,1,1), new DateTime(2014, 1, 2), new DateTime(2014, 1, 3) , new DateTime(2014, 1, 5), new DateTime(2014, 1, 6), new DateTime(2014, 1, 8) };
var startDate = new DateTime(2014,1,2);
var EarliestContiguousDates = dates.Where(x => x>=startDate).OrderBy(x => x)
.Select((x, i) => new { date = x, RangeStartDate = x.AddDays(-i) })
.TakeWhile(x => x.RangeStartDate == dates.Where(y => y >= startDate).Min()).Count();
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 109567
Yet another approach using a loop. (I agree with the others that said a loop would be cleaner than using Linq for this task.)
public static int NumConsecutiveDays(IEnumerable<DateTime> dates)
{
var previous = DateTime.MinValue;
var oneDay = TimeSpan.FromDays(1);
int result = 0;
foreach (var current in dates.OrderBy(d => d))
{
if (current.Date - previous.Date == oneDay)
++result;
previous = current;
}
return result > 0 ? result + 1 : 0; // Need to add 1 to result if it is not zero.
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 471
This is the cleanest solution I can come up with...
var startDate = new DateTime(2022, 9, 1);
var days = new List<DateTime>()
{
new(2022, 8, 28),
new(2022, 9, 1),
new(2022, 9, 2),
new(2022, 9, 3),
new(2022, 9, 4),
new(2022, 9, 7)
};
var consecutiveDays = GetConsecutiveDays(startDate, days);
foreach (var day in consecutiveDays)
{
Console.WriteLine(day);
}
Console.ReadKey();
static IEnumerable<DateTime> GetConsecutiveDays(DateTime startDate, IEnumerable<DateTime> days)
{
var wantedDate = startDate;
foreach (var day in days.Where(d => d >= startDate).OrderBy(d => d))
{
if (day == wantedDate)
{
yield return day;
wantedDate = wantedDate.AddDays(1);
}
else
{
yield break;
}
}
}
Output is: 01.09.2022 0:00:00 02.09.2022 0:00:00 03.09.2022 0:00:00 04.09.2022 0:00:00
If you wanted the count, you can call .Count() on the result or just modify the method... Should be easy.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 19641
Using a loop would probably be the cleanest way to go. I would use something like the following:
List<DateTime> GetConsecutiveDates(IEnumerable<DateTime> range, DateTime startDate)
{
var orderedRange = range.OrderBy(d => d).ToList();
int startDateIndex = orderedRange.IndexOf(startDate);
if (startDateIndex == -1) return null;
var consecutiveDates = new List<DateTime> { orderedRange[startDateIndex] };
for (int i = startDateIndex + 1; i < orderedRange.Count; i++)
{
if (orderedRange[i] != orderedRange[i - 1].AddDays(1)) break;
consecutiveDates.Add(orderedRange[i]);
}
return consecutiveDates;
}
Upvotes: 2