I am using following code & its working perfectly fine in iPhone OS 3.2
+(NSDate *)NSDateFromString:(NSString *)dateString
{
NSDateFormatter *dateFormatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[dateFormatter setDateStyle:NSDateFormatterShortStyle];
[dateFormatter setTimeStyle:NSDateFormatterShortStyle];
[dateFormatter setDateFormat:@"yyyy-MM-dd"];
NSDate *dateObj=[dateFormatter dateFromString:dateString];
[dateFormatter release], dateFormatter=nil;
return dateObj;
}
But when I tried to use the same code I iPhone OS 4.0 the dateObj was nil.
The reason is :
- (id)init
method for NSDateFormatter is only Available in iPhone OS 2.0 through iPhone OS 3.2. It is deprecated in iPhone OS 4.0.
Now what is the solution for that ? How to init NSDateFormater? What's the alternative ?
In iOS2.x and 3.x the NSDate description/datefromstring function returns: 2010-09-24 17:30:00 - 0700
in iOS 4.1 it returns this: 2010-09-25 00:30:00 GMT
You could submit a bug to apple. It doesn't even follow the specification which states that it should return 0000 for the offset. So not only does it not return local date, it also uses GMT instead of an offset. It appears that this new format isn't compatible with NSDateFormatter methods.
Also, I don't think it is an error in documentation. In the API Diff document, it lists that init is removed for NSDateFormatter.
- (id)init
is not deprecated for NSDateFormatter in iOS4. That's an error in the documentation.[NSDateFormatter dateFormatFromTemplate:options:locale:] might work better
// "M/d h:mm a" // US English format returned for US locale