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I am trying to create a program for my school, and I want it to say how long until the current period ends. I have found how to find what period it currently is, but unsure of how to get the basic hours, minutes, and seconds.
In my past attempts I got a number like 14.234534 and, I need a number so I can put it into basic hours, minutes and seconds.
I have this already and it is what gave me the 14.25341
var now = DateTime.Now;
double diffHours = 24 - (now - now.Date).TotalHours + 8;
string final = diffHours.ToString();
label11.Text = final;
Thanks!
I can't really tell from your description what "the current period ends" time is. If you can express that as a DateTime, then you can get a TimeSpan by subtracting a DateTime from another DateTime. For example, it's just after 6:30 pm local time here, so if I can calculate the time left until midnight like this:
var tonightAtMidnight = DateTime.Today + TimeSpan.FromDays(1);
TimeSpan timeLeftUntilMidnight = tonightAtMidnight - DateTime.Now;
Console.WriteLine(timeLeftUntilMidnight.ToString("g"));
I get this on my console:
5:30:23.1215299
If you lookup TimeSpan.ToString(string) you can see how to format that anyway you want.
Update
Consider some code that looks like this:
private static readonly DateTime[] periodEndings = new DateTime[] {
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (8, 40, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (9, 20, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (10, 0, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (10, 40, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (11, 20, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (12, 0, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (12, 40, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (13, 20, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (14, 0, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (14, 40, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (15, 20, 0),
DateTime.Today + new TimeSpan (16, 0, 0),
};
static string CalculateTimeToNextPeriod(DateTime now) {
if (now < periodEndings[0]) {
return "School hasn't started";
};
for (var i = 1; i < periodEndings.Length; ++i) {
if (now > periodEndings[i - 1] && now < periodEndings[i]) {
var timeLeft = periodEndings[i] - now;
return timeLeft.ToString(#"hh\:mm\:ss");
}
}
//otherwise
return "School's over for the day";
}
The static array sets the time periods, and the little function returns a string that contains the hours/min/sec left from some time until the end of the period that ends after that time. I really don't know what you are trying to do, but this should give you some ideas.
Rather than going back and forth between int, double, and DateTime values, lets keep everything in terms of the TimeSpan type:
var Day = new TimeSpan(24, 0, 0);
var result = Day.Subtract(Date.Now - DateTime.Today).AddHours(8);
label11.Text = result.ToString();
There are also a number of format strings you can use to tweak the output.
In a scenario where you would need to calculate the next 'Billing date' if the DAY (2nd, 25th, etc) is known, how can you calculate the number of days left until the next bill payment?
Explanation:
Tom's bill gets generated on the 4th of every month
What's the best way/logic to calculate the days left until the next bill? For example, if today is the 28th of this month, the result would be 6 days left
What we know:
Bill Generation Date is known
Today's Date is known
What I've done so far:
int billingDay = 4; //The day the bill gets generated every month
DateTime today = DateTime.Today; //Today's date
How would I continue this to calculate the next billing date?
P.S: Sorry if this sounds lame, I just couldn't wrap my head around it :)
I think this works:
private int GetNumDaysToNextBillingDate(int billingDayOfMonth)
{
DateTime today = DateTime.Today;
if (today.Day <= billingDayOfMonth)
{
return (new DateTime(today.Year, today.Month, billingDayOfMonth) - today).Days;
}
else
{
var oneMonthFromToday = today.AddMonths(1);
var billingDateNextMonth =
new DateTime(oneMonthFromToday.Year,
oneMonthFromToday.Month, billingDayOfMonth);
return (billingDateNextMonth - today).Days;
}
}
How about:
int billingDay = 4;
DateTime today = DateTime.UtcNow;
DateTime billing = today.Day >= billingDay
? new DateTime(today.AddMonths(1).Year, today.AddMonths(1).Month, billingDay)
: new DateTime(today.Year, today.Month, billingDay);
TimeSpan left = billing - today;
This uses a loop but is less prone to error as it takes into account month and year changes:
int DaysUntilBilling(int billingDay, DateTime referenceDate)
{
int count = 0;
while (referenceDate.AddDays(count).Day != billingDay)
{
count++;
};
return count;
}
You of course don't need to pass a DateTime in as an argument if you are always using today's date, but this helps to test that that for different inputs, you get the desired output:
int billingDay = 4;
DaysUntilBilling(billingDay, DateTime.Now); //26 (today is 9th Aug 2016)
DaysUntilBilling(billingDay, new DateTime(2016, 09, 03); //1
DaysUntilBilling(billingDay, new DateTime(2016, 09, 04); //0
DaysUntilBilling(billingDay, new DateTime(2016, 08, 05); //30
DaysUntilBilling(billingDay, new DateTime(2016, 12, 19); //16
This link might help you :
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.datetime.daysinmonth(v=vs.110).aspx
What you can do is something like this:
int daysUntilBill = 0;
int billingDay = 4;
DateTime today = DateTime.Today;
if (billingDay > today.Day) {
daysUntilBill = billingDay - today.Day;
} else {
int daysLeftInMonth = DateTime.DaysInMonth(today.Year, today.Month) - today.Day;
daysUntilBill = billingDay + daysLeftInMonth;
}
or slightly more concise
int daysUntilBill = (billingDay >= today.Day)
? billingDay - today.Day
: billingDay + DateTime.DaysInMonth(today.Year, today.Month) - today.Day;
This properly handles the year ending too, since it doesn't try to wrap around.
First you need to determine if the current date is on or before the billing day and if it is just subtract the current day of the month. Otherwise you have to determine the next billing date in the following month.
public int DaysToNextBill(int billingDay)
{
var today = DateTime.Today;
if(today.Day <= billingDay)
return billingDay - today.Day;
var nextMonth = today.AddMonth(1);
var nextBillingDate = new DateTime(nextMonth.Year, nextMonth.Month, billingDay)
return (nextBillingDate - today).Days;
}
The only thing left to deal with is if billingDay is greater than the number of days in the current or following month.
Suppose i have a DateTime, e. g. 2010.12.27 12:33:58 and i have an interval frames of, suppose, 2 seconds, excluding the last border.
So, i have the following frames:
12:33:58(incl.)-12:34:00(excl.) - let it be interval 1
12:34:00(incl.)-12:34:02(excl.) - let it be interval 2
12:34:02(incl.)-12:34:04(excl.) - let it be interval 3
and so on.
I'm given a random DateTime value and i have to correlate that value according the above rules.
E. g. the value "12:33:58" falls into interval 1, "12:33:59" falls into interval 1, "12:34:00" falls into interval 2 and so on.
In code it should look like the following:
var dt = DateTime.Now;
DateTime intervalStart = apply_the_algorythm(dt);
It seems to be some simple arithmetic action(s) with float or something, any decisions are welcome!
If the interval is only second resolution and always divided 86400, then take the number of seconds that have passed today, divide it by the interval, round it to an integer value, multiply it, and add it back to today. Something like dateinquestion.Subtract(dateinquestion.Date).TotalSeconds, ((int)seconds/interval)*interval, dateinquestion.Date.AddSeconds(...)
If you want the range of all your intervals to span several days, possibly a long time, you might want to express your DateTime values in UNIX-seconds (the number of seconds since 1970-01-01). Then you just find out when your very first interval started, calculate how many seconds passed since then, and divide by two:
int secondsSinceFirstInterval = <currDate in UNIX time>
- <start of first interval in UNIX time>;
int intervalIndex = secondsSinceFirstInterval / 2;
Otherwise you're better off just counting from midnight.
Use TimeSpan.TotalSeconds and divide the result by the size of the interval.
const long intervalSize = 2;
DateTime start = new DateTime(2010, 12, 27, 12, 33, 58);
TimeSpan timeSpan = DateTime.Now - start;
long intervalInSeconds = (long)timeSpan.TotalSeconds;
long intervalNumber = 1 + intervalInSeconds / intervalSize;
DateTime start = new DateTime(2010, 12, 31, 12, 0, 0);
TimeSpan frameLength = new TimeSpan(0, 0, 3);
DateTime testTime = new DateTime(2010, 12, 31, 12, 0, 4);
int frameIndex = 0;
while (testTime >= start)
{
frameIndex++;
start = start.Add(frameLength);
}
Console.WriteLine(frameIndex);
dates = new List<DateTime>
{
DateTime.Now.AddHours(-1),
DateTime.Now.AddHours(-2),
DateTime.Now.AddHours(-3)
};
dates.Sort((x, y) => DateTime.Compare(x.Date, y.Date));
DateTime dateToCheck = DateTime.Now.AddMinutes(-120);
int place = apply_the_algorythm(dateToCheck);
Console.WriteLine(dateToCheck.ToString() + " is in interval :" +(place+1).ToString());
private int apply_the_algorythm(DateTime date)
{
if (dates.Count == 0)
return -1;
for (int i = 0; i < dates.Count; i++)
{
// check if the given date does not fall into any range.
if (date < dates[0] || date > dates[dates.Count - 1])
{
return -1;
}
else
{
if (date >= dates[i]
&& date < dates[i + 1])
return i;
}
}
return dates.Count-1;
}
This question already has answers here:
How do I calculate someone's age based on a DateTime type birthday?
(74 answers)
Closed 6 years ago.
How can I calculate date difference between two dates in years?
For example: (Datetime.Now.Today() - 11/03/2007) in years.
I have written an implementation that properly works with dates exactly one year apart.
However, it does not gracefully handle negative timespans, unlike the other algorithm. It also doesn't use its own date arithmetic, instead relying upon the standard library for that.
So without further ado, here is the code:
DateTime zeroTime = new DateTime(1, 1, 1);
DateTime a = new DateTime(2007, 1, 1);
DateTime b = new DateTime(2008, 1, 1);
TimeSpan span = b - a;
// Because we start at year 1 for the Gregorian
// calendar, we must subtract a year here.
int years = (zeroTime + span).Year - 1;
// 1, where my other algorithm resulted in 0.
Console.WriteLine("Yrs elapsed: " + years);
Use:
int Years(DateTime start, DateTime end)
{
return (end.Year - start.Year - 1) +
(((end.Month > start.Month) ||
((end.Month == start.Month) && (end.Day >= start.Day))) ? 1 : 0);
}
We had to code a check to establish if the difference between two dates, a start and end date was greater than 2 years.
Thanks to the tips above it was done as follows:
DateTime StartDate = Convert.ToDateTime("01/01/2012");
DateTime EndDate = Convert.ToDateTime("01/01/2014");
DateTime TwoYears = StartDate.AddYears(2);
if EndDate > TwoYears .....
If you need it for knowing someone's age for trivial reasons then Timespan is OK but if you need for calculating superannuation, long term deposits or anything else for financial, scientific or legal purposes then I'm afraid Timespan won't be accurate enough because Timespan assumes that every year has the same number of days, same # of hours and same # of seconds).
In reality the length of some years will vary (for different reasons that are outside the scope of this answer). To get around Timespan's limitation then you can mimic what Excel does which is:
public int GetDifferenceInYears(DateTime startDate, DateTime endDate)
{
//Excel documentation says "COMPLETE calendar years in between dates"
int years = endDate.Year - startDate.Year;
if (startDate.Month == endDate.Month &&// if the start month and the end month are the same
endDate.Day < startDate.Day// AND the end day is less than the start day
|| endDate.Month < startDate.Month)// OR if the end month is less than the start month
{
years--;
}
return years;
}
var totalYears =
(DateTime.Today - new DateTime(2007, 03, 11)).TotalDays
/ 365.2425;
Average days from Wikipedia/Leap_year.
int Age = new DateTime((DateTime.Now - BirthDateTime).Ticks).Year;
To calculate the elapsed years (age), the result will be minus one.
var timeSpan = DateTime.Now - birthDateTime;
int age = new DateTime(timeSpan.Ticks).Year - 1;
Here is a neat trick which lets the system deal with leap years automagically. It gives an accurate answer for all date combinations.
DateTime dt1 = new DateTime(1987, 9, 23, 13, 12, 12, 0);
DateTime dt2 = new DateTime(2007, 6, 15, 16, 25, 46, 0);
DateTime tmp = dt1;
int years = -1;
while (tmp < dt2)
{
years++;
tmp = tmp.AddYears(1);
}
Console.WriteLine("{0}", years);
It's unclear how you want to handle fractional years, but perhaps like this:
DateTime now = DateTime.Now;
DateTime origin = new DateTime(2007, 11, 3);
int calendar_years = now.Year - origin.Year;
int whole_years = calendar_years - ((now.AddYears(-calendar_years) >= origin)? 0: 1);
int another_method = calendar_years - ((now.Month - origin.Month) * 32 >= origin.Day - now.Day)? 0: 1);
I implemented an extension method to get the number of years between two dates, rounded by whole months.
/// <summary>
/// Gets the total number of years between two dates, rounded to whole months.
/// Examples:
/// 2011-12-14, 2012-12-15 returns 1.
/// 2011-12-14, 2012-12-14 returns 1.
/// 2011-12-14, 2012-12-13 returns 0,9167.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="start">
/// Stardate of time period
/// </param>
/// <param name="end">
/// Enddate of time period
/// </param>
/// <returns>
/// Total Years between the two days
/// </returns>
public static double DifferenceTotalYears(this DateTime start, DateTime end)
{
// Get difference in total months.
int months = ((end.Year - start.Year) * 12) + (end.Month - start.Month);
// substract 1 month if end month is not completed
if (end.Day < start.Day)
{
months--;
}
double totalyears = months / 12d;
return totalyears;
}
public string GetAgeText(DateTime birthDate)
{
const double ApproxDaysPerMonth = 30.4375;
const double ApproxDaysPerYear = 365.25;
int iDays = (DateTime.Now - birthDate).Days;
int iYear = (int)(iDays / ApproxDaysPerYear);
iDays -= (int)(iYear * ApproxDaysPerYear);
int iMonths = (int)(iDays / ApproxDaysPerMonth);
iDays -= (int)(iMonths * ApproxDaysPerMonth);
return string.Format("{0} år, {1} måneder, {2} dage", iYear, iMonths, iDays);
}
I found this at TimeSpan for years, months and days:
DateTime target_dob = THE_DOB;
DateTime true_age = DateTime.MinValue + ((TimeSpan)(DateTime.Now - target_dob )); // Minimum value as 1/1/1
int yr = true_age.Year - 1;
If you're dealing with months and years you need something that knows how many days each month has and which years are leap years.
Enter the Gregorian Calendar (and other culture-specific Calendar implementations).
While Calendar doesn't provide methods to directly calculate the difference between two points in time, it does have methods such as
DateTime AddWeeks(DateTime time, int weeks)
DateTime AddMonths(DateTime time, int months)
DateTime AddYears(DateTime time, int years)
DateTime musteriDogum = new DateTime(dogumYil, dogumAy, dogumGun);
int additionalDays = ((DateTime.Now.Year - dogumYil) / 4); //Count of the years with 366 days
int extraDays = additionalDays + ((DateTime.Now.Year % 4 == 0 || musteriDogum.Year % 4 == 0) ? 1 : 0); //We add 1 if this year or year inserted has 366 days
int yearsOld = ((DateTime.Now - musteriDogum).Days - extraDays ) / 365; // Now we extract these extra days from total days and we can divide to 365
Works perfect:
internal static int GetDifferenceInYears(DateTime startDate)
{
int finalResult = 0;
const int DaysInYear = 365;
DateTime endDate = DateTime.Now;
TimeSpan timeSpan = endDate - startDate;
if (timeSpan.TotalDays > 365)
{
finalResult = (int)Math.Round((timeSpan.TotalDays / DaysInYear), MidpointRounding.ToEven);
}
return finalResult;
}
Simple solution:
public int getYearDiff(DateTime startDate, DateTime endDate){
int y = Year(endDate) - Year(startDate);
int startMonth = Month(startDate);
int endMonth = Month(endDate);
if (endMonth < startMonth)
return y - 1;
if (endMonth > startMonth)
return y;
return (Day(endDate) < Day(startDate) ? y - 1 : y);
}
This is the best code to calculate year and month difference:
DateTime firstDate = DateTime.Parse("1/31/2019");
DateTime secondDate = DateTime.Parse("2/1/2016");
int totalYears = firstDate.Year - secondDate.Year;
int totalMonths = 0;
if (firstDate.Month > secondDate.Month)
totalMonths = firstDate.Month - secondDate.Month;
else if (firstDate.Month < secondDate.Month)
{
totalYears -= 1;
int monthDifference = secondDate.Month - firstDate.Month;
totalMonths = 12 - monthDifference;
}
if ((firstDate.Day - secondDate.Day) == 30)
{
totalMonths += 1;
if (totalMonths % 12 == 0)
{
totalYears += 1;
totalMonths = 0;
}
}
Maybe this will be helpful for answering the question: Count of days in given year,
new DateTime(anyDate.Year, 12, 31).DayOfYear //will include leap years too
Regarding DateTime.DayOfYear Property.
The following is based off Dana's simple code which produces the correct answer in most cases. But it did not take in to account less than a year between dates. So here is the code that I use to produce consistent results:
public static int DateDiffYears(DateTime startDate, DateTime endDate)
{
var yr = endDate.Year - startDate.Year - 1 +
(endDate.Month >= startDate.Month && endDate.Day >= startDate.Day ? 1 : 0);
return yr < 0 ? 0 : yr;
}
Example: given two dates below, finish is always greater than or equal to start
start = 2001 Jan 01
finish = 2002 Mar 15
So from 2001 Jan 01 to the end of 2002 Feb
months = 12 + 2 = 14
For 2002 March
15/30 = 0.5
so grand total is 14.5 months difference.
It's very easy to work out by hand but how do I code it elegantly? At the moment I have the combination of a lot of if else and while loops to achieve what I want but I believe there are simpler solutions out there.
Update: the output needs to be precise (not approximation) for example:
if start 2001 Jan 01 and finish 2001 Apr 16, the output should be 1 + 1 + 1= 3 (for Jan, Feb and Mar) and 16 / 31 = 0.516 month, so the total is 3.516.
Another example would be if I start on 2001 Jul 5 and finish on 2002 Jul 10, the output should be 11 month up to the end of June 2002, and (31-5)/31 = 0.839 and 10/31 = 0.323 months, so the total is 11 + 0.839 + 0.323 = 12.162.
I extended Josh Stodola's code and Hightechrider's code:
public static decimal GetMonthsInRange(this IDateRange thisDateRange)
{
var start = thisDateRange.Start;
var finish = thisDateRange.Finish;
var monthsApart = Math.Abs(12*(start.Year - finish.Year) + start.Month - finish.Month) - 1;
decimal daysInStartMonth = DateTime.DaysInMonth(start.Year, start.Month);
decimal daysInFinishMonth = DateTime.DaysInMonth(finish.Year, finish.Month);
var daysApartInStartMonth = (daysInStartMonth - start.Day + 1)/daysInStartMonth;
var daysApartInFinishMonth = finish.Day/daysInFinishMonth;
return monthsApart + daysApartInStartMonth + daysApartInFinishMonth;
}
I gave an int answer before, and then realized what you asked for a more precise answer. I was tired, so I deleted and went to bed. So much for that, I was unable to fall asleep! For some reason, this question really bugged me, and I had to solve it. So here you go...
static void Main(string[] args)
{
decimal diff;
diff = monthDifference(new DateTime(2001, 1, 1), new DateTime(2002, 3, 15));
Console.WriteLine(diff.ToString("n2")); //14.45
diff = monthDifference(new DateTime(2001, 1, 1), new DateTime(2001, 4, 16));
Console.WriteLine(diff.ToString("n2")); //3.50
diff = monthDifference(new DateTime(2001, 7, 5), new DateTime(2002, 7, 10));
Console.WriteLine(diff.ToString("n2")); //12.16
Console.Read();
}
static decimal monthDifference(DateTime d1, DateTime d2)
{
if (d1 > d2)
{
DateTime hold = d1;
d1 = d2;
d2 = hold;
}
int monthsApart = Math.Abs(12 * (d1.Year-d2.Year) + d1.Month - d2.Month) - 1;
decimal daysInMonth1 = DateTime.DaysInMonth(d1.Year, d1.Month);
decimal daysInMonth2 = DateTime.DaysInMonth(d2.Year, d2.Month);
decimal dayPercentage = ((daysInMonth1 - d1.Day) / daysInMonth1)
+ (d2.Day / daysInMonth2);
return monthsApart + dayPercentage;
}
Now I shall have sweet dreams. Goodnight :)
What you want is probably something close to this ... which pretty much follows your explanation as to how to calculate it:
var startofd1 = d1.AddDays(-d1.Day + 1);
var startOfNextMonthAfterd1 = startofd1.AddMonths(1); // back to start of month and then to next month
int daysInFirstMonth = (startOfNextMonthAfterd1 - startofd1).Days;
double fraction1 = (double)(daysInFirstMonth - (d1.Day - 1)) / daysInFirstMonth; // fractional part of first month remaining
var startofd2 = d2.AddDays(-d2.Day + 1);
var startOfNextMonthAfterd2 = startofd2.AddMonths(1); // back to start of month and then to next month
int daysInFinalMonth = (startOfNextMonthAfterd2 - startofd2).Days;
double fraction2 = (double)(d2.Day - 1) / daysInFinalMonth; // fractional part of last month
// now find whole months in between
int monthsInBetween = (startofd2.Year - startOfNextMonthAfterd1.Year) * 12 + (startofd2.Month - startOfNextMonthAfterd1.Month);
return monthsInBetween + fraction1 + fraction2;
NB This has not been tested very well but it shows how to handle problems like this by finding well known dates at the start of months around the problem values and then working off them.
While loops for date time calculations are always a bad idea: see http://www.zuneboards.com/forums/zune-news/38143-cause-zune-30-leapyear-problem-isolated.html
Depending on how exactly you want your logic to work, this would at least give you a decent approximation:
// 365 days per year + 1 day per leap year = 1461 days every 4 years
// But years divisible by 100 are not leap years
// So 1461 days every 4 years - 1 day per 100th year = 36524 days every 100 years
// 12 months per year = 1200 months every 100 years
const double DaysPerMonth = 36524.0 / 1200.0;
double GetMonthsDifference(DateTime start, DateTime finish)
{
double days = (finish - start).TotalDays;
return days / DaysPerMonth;
}
One way to do this is that you'll see around quite a bit is:
private static int monthDifference(DateTime startDate, DateTime endDate)
{
int monthsApart = 12 * (startDate.Year - endDate.Year) + startDate.Month - endDate.Month;
return Math.Abs(monthsApart);
}
However, you want "partial months" which this doesn't give. But what is the point in comparing apples (January/March/May/July/August/October/December) with oranges (April/June/September/November) or even bananas that are sometimes coconuts (February)?
An alternative is to import Microsoft.VisualBasic and do this:
DateTime FromDate;
DateTime ToDate;
FromDate = DateTime.Parse("2001 Jan 01");
ToDate = DateTime.Parse("2002 Mar 15");
string s = DateAndTime.DateDiff (DateInterval.Month, FromDate,ToDate, FirstDayOfWeek.System, FirstWeekOfYear.System ).ToString();
However again:
The return value for
DateInterval.Month is calculated
purely from the year and month parts
of the arguments
[Source]
Just improved Josh's answer
static decimal monthDifference(DateTime d1, DateTime d2)
{
if (d1 > d2)
{
DateTime hold = d1;
d1 = d2;
d2 = hold;
}
decimal monthsApart = Math.Abs((12 * (d1.Year - d2.Year)) + d2.Month - d1.Month - 1);
decimal daysinStartingMonth = DateTime.DaysInMonth(d1.Year, d1.Month);
monthsApart = monthsApart + (1-((d1.Day - 1) / daysinStartingMonth));
// Replace (d1.Day - 1) with d1.Day incase you DONT want to have both inclusive difference.
decimal daysinEndingMonth = DateTime.DaysInMonth(d2.Year, d2.Month);
monthsApart = monthsApart + (d2.Day / daysinEndingMonth);
return monthsApart;
}
The answer works perfectly and while the terseness of the code makes it very small I had to break everything apart into smaller functions with named variables so that I could really understand what was going on... So, basically I just took Josh Stodola's code and Hightechrider's mentioned in Jeff's comment and made it smaller with comments explaining what was going on and why the calculations were being made, and hopefully this may help someone else:
[Test]
public void Calculate_Total_Months_Difference_Between_Two_Dates()
{
var startDate = DateTime.Parse( "10/8/1996" );
var finishDate = DateTime.Parse( "9/8/2012" ); // this should be now:
int numberOfMonthsBetweenStartAndFinishYears = getNumberOfMonthsBetweenStartAndFinishYears( startDate, finishDate );
int absMonthsApartMinusOne = getAbsMonthsApartMinusOne( startDate, finishDate, numberOfMonthsBetweenStartAndFinishYears );
decimal daysLeftToCompleteStartMonthPercentage = getDaysLeftToCompleteInStartMonthPercentage( startDate );
decimal daysCompletedSoFarInFinishMonthPercentage = getDaysCompletedSoFarInFinishMonthPercentage( finishDate );
// .77 + .26 = 1.04
decimal totalDaysDifferenceInStartAndFinishMonthsPercentage = daysLeftToCompleteStartMonthPercentage + daysCompletedSoFarInFinishMonthPercentage;
// 13 + 1.04 = 14.04 months difference.
decimal totalMonthsDifference = absMonthsApartMinusOne + totalDaysDifferenceInStartAndFinishMonthsPercentage;
//return totalMonths;
}
private static int getNumberOfMonthsBetweenStartAndFinishYears( DateTime startDate, DateTime finishDate )
{
int yearsApart = startDate.Year - finishDate.Year;
const int INT_TotalMonthsInAYear = 12;
// 12 * -1 = -12
int numberOfMonthsBetweenYears = INT_TotalMonthsInAYear * yearsApart;
return numberOfMonthsBetweenYears;
}
private static int getAbsMonthsApartMinusOne( DateTime startDate, DateTime finishDate, int numberOfMonthsBetweenStartAndFinishYears )
{
// This may be negative i.e. 7 - 9 = -2
int numberOfMonthsBetweenStartAndFinishMonths = startDate.Month - finishDate.Month;
// Absolute Value Of Total Months In Years Plus The Simple Months Difference Which May Be Negative So We Use Abs Function
int absDiffInMonths = Math.Abs( numberOfMonthsBetweenStartAndFinishYears + numberOfMonthsBetweenStartAndFinishMonths );
// Subtract one here because we are going to use a perecentage difference based on the number of days left in the start month
// and adding together the number of days that we've made it so far in the finish month.
int absMonthsApartMinusOne = absDiffInMonths - 1;
return absMonthsApartMinusOne;
}
/// <summary>
/// For example for 7/8/2012 there are 24 days left in the month so about .77 percentage of month is left.
/// </summary>
private static decimal getDaysLeftToCompleteInStartMonthPercentage( DateTime startDate )
{
// startDate = "7/8/2012"
// 31
decimal daysInStartMonth = DateTime.DaysInMonth( startDate.Year, startDate.Month );
// 31 - 8 = 23
decimal totalDaysInStartMonthMinusStartDay = daysInStartMonth - startDate.Day;
// add one to mark the day as being completed. 23 + 1 = 24
decimal daysLeftInStartMonth = totalDaysInStartMonthMinusStartDay + 1;
// 24 / 31 = .77 days left to go in the month
decimal daysLeftToCompleteInStartMonthPercentage = daysLeftInStartMonth / daysInStartMonth;
return daysLeftToCompleteInStartMonthPercentage;
}
/// <summary>
/// For example if the finish date were 9/8/2012 we've completed 8 days so far or .24 percent of the month
/// </summary>
private static decimal getDaysCompletedSoFarInFinishMonthPercentage( DateTime finishDate )
{
// for septebmer = 30 days in month.
decimal daysInFinishMonth = DateTime.DaysInMonth( finishDate.Year, finishDate.Month );
// 8 days divided by 30 = .26 days completed so far in finish month.
decimal daysCompletedSoFarInFinishMonthPercentage = finishDate.Day / daysInFinishMonth;
return daysCompletedSoFarInFinishMonthPercentage;
}
This solution calculates whole months and then adds the partial month based on the end of the time period. This way it always calculates full months between the dates' day-of-month and then calculates the partial month based on the number of remaining days.
public decimal getMonthDiff(DateTime date1, DateTime date2) {
// Make parameters agnostic
var earlyDate = (date1 < date2 ? date1 : date2);
var laterDate = (date1 > date2 ? date1 : date2);
// Calculate the change in full months
decimal months = ((laterDate.Year - earlyDate.Year) * 12) + (laterDate.Month - earlyDate.Month) - 1;
// Add partial months based on the later date
if (earlyDate.Day <= laterDate.Day) {
decimal laterMonthDays = DateTime.DaysInMonth(laterDate.Year, laterDate.Month);
decimal laterPartialMonth = ((laterDate.Day - earlyDate.Day) / laterMonthDays);
months += laterPartialMonth + 1;
} else {
var laterLastMonth = laterDate.AddMonths(-1);
decimal laterLastMonthDays = DateTime.DaysInMonth(laterLastMonth.Year, laterLastMonth.Month);
decimal laterPartialMonth = ((laterLastMonthDays - earlyDate.Day + laterDate.Day) / laterLastMonthDays);
months += laterPartialMonth;
}
return months;
}
The calculation below is one that is according the way the Dutch Tax Authority wants months calculated. This means that when the starts day is for example feb 22, march 23 should be result in something above 1 and not just something like 0.98.
private decimal GetMonthDiffBetter(DateTime date1, DateTime date2)
{
DateTime start = date1 < date2 ? date1 : date2;
DateTime end = date1 < date2 ? date2 : date1;
int totalYearMonths = (end.Year - start.Year) * 12;
int restMonths = end.Month - start.Month;
int totalMonths = totalYearMonths + restMonths;
decimal monthPart = (decimal)end.Day / (decimal)start.Day;
return totalMonths - 1 + monthPart;
}`
This should get you where you need to go:
DateTime start = new DateTime(2001, 1, 1);
DateTime finish = new DateTime(2002, 3, 15);
double diff = (finish - start).TotalDays / 30;
the framework as a TimeSpan object that is a result of subtracting two dates.
the subtraction is already considering the various option of February(28/29 days a month) so in my opinion this is the best practice
after you got it you can format it the way you like best
DateTime dates1 = new DateTime(2010, 1, 1);
DateTime dates2 = new DateTime(2010, 3, 15);
var span = dates1.Subtract(dates2);
span.ToString("your format here");
private Double GetTotalMonths(DateTime future, DateTime past)
{
Double totalMonths = 0.0;
while ((future - past).TotalDays > 28 )
{
past = past.AddMonths(1);
totalMonths += 1;
}
var daysInCurrent = DateTime.DaysInMonth(future.Year, future.Month);
var remaining = future.Day - past.Day;
totalMonths += ((Double)remaining / (Double)daysInCurrent);
return totalMonths;
}