Find difference in seconds between NSDates as integer using Swift

SwiftNsdateNstimeinterval

Swift Problem Overview


I'm writing a piece of code where I want to time how long a button was held down. To do that I recorded an NSDate() when the button was pressed, and tried using the timeIntervalSinceDate function when the button was released. That seems to work but I can't find any way to print the result or switch it to an integer.

var timeAtPress = NSDate() 

@IBAction func pressed(sender: AnyObject) {
    println("pressed")
    timeAtPress = NSDate()
}

@IBAction func released(sender: AnyObject) {
    println("released")
    var elapsedTime = NSDate.timeIntervalSinceDate(timeAtPress)
    duration = ???
}

I've seen a few similar questions, but I don't know C so I had a hard time understanding the answers given. If there is a more efficient way to find out how long the button was held down I'm open to suggestions. Thanks in advance.

Swift Solutions


Solution 1 - Swift

Your attempt to calculate elapsedTime is incorrect. In Swift 3, it would be:

let elapsed = Date().timeIntervalSince(timeAtPress)

Note the () after the Date reference. The Date() instantiates a new date object, and then timeIntervalSince returns the time difference between that and timeAtPress. That will return a floating point value (technically, a TimeInterval).

If you want that as truncated to a Int value, you can just use:

let duration = Int(elapsed)

And, BTW, your definition of the timeAtPress variable doesn't need to instantiate a Date object. I presume you intended:

var timeAtPress: Date!

That defines the variable as a Date variable (an implicitly unwrapped one), but you'd presumably defer the actual instantiation of that variable until pressed is called.


Alternatively, I often use CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent(), e.g.,

var start: CFAbsoluteTime!

And when I want to set startTime, I do the following:

start = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent()

And when I want to calculate the number of seconds elapsed, I do the following:

let elapsed = CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent() - start

It's worth noting that the CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent documentation warns us:

> Repeated calls to this function do not guarantee monotonically increasing results. The system time may decrease due to synchronization with external time references or due to an explicit user change of the clock.

This means that if you're unfortunate enough to measure elapsed time when one of these adjustments take place, you can end up with incorrect elapsed time calculation. This is true for NSDate/Date calculations too. It's safest to use a mach_absolute_time based calculation (most easily done with CACurrentMediaTime):

let start = CACurrentMediaTime()

and

let elapsed = CACurrentMediaTime() - start

This uses mach_absolute_time, but avoids some of its complexities outlined in Technical Q&A QA1398.

Remember, though, that CACurrentMediaTime/mach_absolute_time will be reset when the device is rebooted. So, bottom line, if you need accurate elapsed time calculations while an app is running, use CACurrentMediaTime. But if you're going to save this start time in persistent storage which you might recall when the app is restarted at some future date, then you have to use Date or CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent, and just live with any inaccuracies that may entail.

Solution 2 - Swift

NSDate() and NSCalendar() sound like a good choice. Use calendar calculation and leave the actual math part to the framework. Here is a quick example of getting the seconds between two NSDate()

let startDate = NSDate()
let endDate = NSDate()
let calendar = NSCalendar.currentCalendar()
let dateComponents = calendar.components(NSCalendarUnit.CalendarUnitSecond, fromDate: startDate, toDate: endDate, options: nil)
let seconds = dateComponents.second
println("Seconds: \(seconds)")

Solution 3 - Swift

Swift 5

let differenceInSeconds = Int(endDate.timeIntervalSince(startDate))

Solution 4 - Swift

According with the Freddy's answer, this is the function in swift 3:

let start = Date()
let end = Date(timeIntervalSince1970: 100)
let calendar = Calendar.current
let unitFlags = Set<Calendar.Component>([ .second])
let datecomponents = calendar.dateComponents(unitFlags, from: start, to: end)
let seconds = datecomponents.second
print(String(describing: seconds))

Solution 5 - Swift

This is how you can get the difference in latest version of Swift 3

let calendar = NSCalendar.current
var compos:Set<Calendar.Component> = Set<Calendar.Component>()
compos.insert(.second)
compos.insert(.minute)
let difference = calendar.dateComponents(compos, from: fromDate, to: toDate)
print("diff in minute=\(difference.minute!)") // difference in minute
print("diff in seconds=\(difference.second!)") // difference in seconds

Reference: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27182023/getting-the-difference-between-two-nsdates-in-months-days-hours-minutes-seconds

Solution 6 - Swift

Swift 5

    let startDate = Date()
    let endDate = Date()
    let calendar = Calendar.current
    let dateComponents = calendar.compare(startDate, to: endDate, toGranularity: .second)
    let seconds = dateComponents.rawValue
    print("Seconds: \(seconds)")

Solution 7 - Swift

For Swift 3 Seconds between 2 time in "hh:mm"

func secondsIn(_ str: String)->Int{
    var strArr = str.characters.split{$0 == ":"}.map(String.init)
    var sec = Int(strArr[0])! * 3600
    var sec1 = Int(strArr[1])! * 36
    print("sec")
    print(sec+sec1)
    return sec+sec1
    
}

Usage

var sec1 = secondsIn(shuttleTime)
var sec2 = secondsIn(dateToString(Date()))
print(sec1-sec2)

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionErikView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - SwiftRobView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - SwiftFreddyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - SwiftiKKView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - SwiftAndres PaladinesView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - SwiftRujoota ShahView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - SwiftAhmed SafadiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - SwiftRishabh DugarView Answer on Stackoverflow