How to compare dates in c#

C#Datetime

C# Problem Overview


I have two dates. One date is input and other is DateTime.Now. I have them in mm/dd/yyyy format, it can even be m/d/yy format also. Both dates are nullable i.e, datatype is DateTime?, since I can pass null also as input. Now I want to compare the two dates only with mm/dd/yyyy or m/d/yy format.

C# Solutions


Solution 1 - C#

If you have your dates in DateTime variables, they don't have a format.

You can use the Date property to return a DateTime value with the time portion set to midnight. So, if you have:

DateTime dt1 = DateTime.Parse("07/12/2011");
DateTime dt2 = DateTime.Now;

if(dt1.Date > dt2.Date)
{
     //It's a later date
}
else
{
     //It's an earlier or equal date
}

Solution 2 - C#

If you have date in DateTime variable then its a DateTime object and doesn't contain any format. Formatted date are expressed as string when you call DateTime.ToString method and provide format in it.

Lets say you have two DateTime variable, you can use the compare method for comparision,

DateTime date1 = new DateTime(2009, 8, 1, 0, 0, 0);
DateTime date2 = new DateTime(2009, 8, 2, 0, 0, 0);
int result = DateTime.Compare(date1, date2);
string relationship;

if (result < 0)
   relationship = "is earlier than";
else if (result == 0)
   relationship = "is the same time as";         
else
   relationship = "is later than";

Code snippet taken from msdn.

Solution 3 - C#

Firstly, understand that DateTime objects aren't formatted. They just store the Year, Month, Day, Hour, Minute, Second, etc as a numeric value and the formatting occurs when you want to represent it as a string somehow. You can compare DateTime objects without formatting them.

To compare an input date with DateTime.Now, you need to first parse the input into a date and then compare just the Year/Month/Day portions:

DateTime inputDate;
if(!DateTime.TryParse(inputString, out inputDate))
    throw new ArgumentException("Input string not in the correct format.");

if(inputDate.Date == DateTime.Now.Date) {
    // Same date!
}

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionshafiView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - C#Damien_The_UnbelieverView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - C#FIre PandaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - C#BC.View Answer on Stackoverflow