I want to compare two dates: date1 and date2
2011-06-06 12:59:48.994 Project[419:707] firstDate:2011-06-06 10:59:21 +0000
2011-06-06 12:59:49.004 Project[419:707] selectedData:2011-06-06 10:59:17 +0000
but these dates have different time and when I use NSOrderedSame it don't work fine, how can I solve?
my code:
NSDate *firstDate = [[appDelegate.project objectAtIndex:i]objectAtIndex:3];
NSDate *secondDate = [[appDelegate.project objectAtIndex:i]objectAtIndex:4];
NSCalendar *calendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSInteger comps = (NSDayCalendarUnit | NSMonthCalendarUnit | NSYearCalendarUnit);
NSDateComponents *date1Components = [calendar components:comps
fromDate:firstDate];
NSDateComponents *date2Components = [calendar components:comps
fromDate:secondDate];
NSDateComponents *date3Components = [calendar components:comps fromDate:appDelegate.selectedDate];
NSLog(@"firstDate:%@", [date1Components date]);
NSLog(@"secondDate:%@", [date2Components date]);
NSLog(@"selectedData:%@", [date3Components date]);
NSComparisonResult compareStart = [[date1Components date] compare: [date3Components date]];
NSComparisonResult compareEnd = [[date2Components date] compare: [date3Components date]];
if ((compareStart == NSOrderedAscending || compareStart == NSOrderedSame)
&& (compareEnd == NSOrderedDescending || compareEnd == NSOrderedSame))
{
NSLog(@"inside");
Then I want to compare my dates and entry inside the "if" when date1 <= selectedDate <= date2; now I understand because I have a warning: I should add this "[date1Components date]" and it work; the problem is that I have in the NSLog null values, why??
There is another handy method to create for a given date the date that represents the start of a given unit:
[aCalendar rangeOfUnit:startDate:interval:forDate:]
To illustrate how this method works, see this code, that easily creates the date for the beginning of the day, week, month and year for a given date (here: now).
result:
this allows us to shorten the first code to:
Note, that in this code,
date1
anddate2
will be overwritten. Alternatively you can pass in a reference to another NSDate pointer forstartDate
as shown in the code above, wherenow
stays untouched.I have used another method with NSDateFormatter and a string comparison, less smarter than NSDate compare method but faster to write and flexible enough to do variety of comparison :
Okay, so it's a few years after the original question was asked, but it's probably worth mentioning that
NSCalendar
now has a number of methods that make certain date comparison questions much more straight-forward:Swift Version , Comparing Dates and ignoring their time.