This example shows how to format Date Time using String.Format method. All
formatting can be done also using DateTime.ToString method.
Custom Date Time
Formatting
There are following custom format specifiers y (year), M (month), d (day), h (hour
12), H (hour
24), m (minute), s (second), f (second
fraction), F (second
fraction, trailing zeroes are trimmed),t (P.M or A.M) and z (time zone).
Following examples demonstrate how the format specifiers are
rewritten to the output.
// create date time
2008-03-09 16:05:07.123
DateTime dt = new DateTime(2008, 3, 9, 16, 5, 7, 123);
String.Format("{0:y yy yyy
yyyy}", dt); //
"8 08 008 2008" year
String.Format("{0:M MM MMM
MMMM}", dt); //
"3 03 Mar March" month
String.Format("{0:d dd ddd
dddd}", dt); //
"9 09 Sun Sunday" day
String.Format("{0:h hh H HH}", dt); //
"4 04 16 16" hour 12/24
String.Format("{0:m mm}", dt); //
"5 05" minute
String.Format("{0:s ss}", dt); //
"7 07" second
String.Format("{0:f ff fff
ffff}", dt); //
"1 12 123 1230" sec.fraction
String.Format("{0:F FF FFF
FFFF}", dt); //
"1 12 123 123" without
zeroes
String.Format("{0:t tt}", dt); //
"P PM" A.M. or P.M.
String.Format("{0:z zz zzz}", dt); //
"-6 -06 -06:00" time zone
You can use also date separator / (slash) and time sepatator : (colon). These characters will be rewritten to characters defined in the current DateTimeFormatInfo.DateSeparator andDateTimeFormatInfo.TimeSeparator.
[C#]
// date separator in
german culture is "." (so "/" changes to ".")
String.Format("{0:d/M/yyyy
HH:mm:ss}", dt); // "9/3/2008 16:05:07" - english (en-US)
String.Format("{0:d/M/yyyy
HH:mm:ss}", dt); // "9.3.2008 16:05:07" - german (de-DE)
Here are some examples of custom date and time formatting:
[C#]
// month/day numbers
without/with leading zeroes
String.Format("{0:M/d/yyyy}", dt); // "3/9/2008"
String.Format("{0:MM/dd/yyyy}", dt); // "03/09/2008"
// day/month names
String.Format("{0:ddd, MMM d,
yyyy}", dt); //
"Sun, Mar 9, 2008"
String.Format("{0:dddd, MMMM d,
yyyy}", dt); //
"Sunday, March 9, 2008"
// two/four digit year
String.Format("{0:MM/dd/yy}", dt); // "03/09/08"
String.Format("{0:MM/dd/yyyy}", dt); //
"03/09/2008"
Standard DateTime
Formatting
In DateTime Format Info there are defined standard
patterns for the current culture. For example property Short Time Pattern is
string that contains value h:mm tt for en-US culture and value HH:mm for de-DE culture.
Following table shows patterns defined in DateTimeFormatInfo and
their values for en-US culture. First column contains format specifiers for
the String.Format method.
Specifier
|
DateTimeFormatInfo
property
|
Pattern value (for
en-US culture)
|
t
|
ShortTimePattern
|
h:mm tt
|
d
|
ShortDatePattern
|
M/d/yyyy
|
T
|
LongTimePattern
|
h:mm:ss
tt
|
D
|
LongDatePattern
|
dddd,
MMMM dd, yyyy
|
f
|
(combination of D and t)
|
dddd,
MMMM dd, yyyy h:mm tt
|
F
|
FullDateTimePattern
|
dddd,
MMMM dd, yyyy h:mm:ss tt
|
g
|
(combination of d and t)
|
M/d/yyyy
h:mm tt
|
G
|
(combination of d and T)
|
M/d/yyyy
h:mm:ss tt
|
m, M
|
MonthDayPattern
|
MMMM dd
|
y, Y
|
YearMonthPattern
|
MMMM,
yyyy
|
r, R
|
RFC1123Pattern
|
ddd, dd
MMM yyyy HH':'mm':'ss 'GMT' (*)
|
s
|
SortableDateTimePattern
|
yyyy'-'MM'-'dd'T'HH':'mm':'ss (*)
|
u
|
UniversalSortableDateTimePattern
|
yyyy'-'MM'-'dd
HH':'mm':'ss'Z' (*)
|
(*) = culture independent
|
Following examples show usage of standard format specifiers in String.Format method
and the resulting output.
[C#]
String.Format("{0:t}", dt); // "4:05 PM" ShortTime
String.Format("{0:d}", dt); //"3/9/2008" ShortDate
String.Format("{0:T}", dt); //"4:05:07 PM" LongTime
String.Format("{0:D}", dt); //"Sunday, March 09, 2008" LongDate
String.Format("{0:f}", dt); //"Sunday, March 09, 2008 4:05 PM" LongDate+ShortTime
String.Format("{0:F}", dt); //"Sunday, March 09, 2008 4:05:07 PM" FullDateTime
String.Format("{0:g}", dt); //"3/9/2008 4:05 PM" ShortDate+ShortTime
String.Format("{0:G}", dt); //"3/9/2008 4:05:07 PM" ShortDate+LongTime
String.Format("{0:m}", dt); //"March 09" MonthDay
String.Format("{0:y}", dt); //"March, 2008" YearMonth
String.Format("{0:r}", dt); //"Sun, 09 Mar 2008 16:05:07 GMT" RFC1123
String.Format("{0:s}", dt); //"2008-03-09T16:05:07" SortableDateTime
String.Format("{0:u}", dt); //"2008-03-09 16:05:07Z" UniversalSortableDateTime
No comments:
Post a Comment