Multiply TimeSpan in .NET
C#.NetDateTimeTimespanC# Problem Overview
How do I multiply a TimeSpan object in C#? Assuming the variable duration
is a TimeSpan, I would like, for example
duration*5
But that gives me an error "operator * cannot be applied to types TimeSpan and int". Here's my current workaround
duration+duration+duration+duration+duration
But this doesn't extend to non-integer multiples, eg. duration * 3.5
C# Solutions
Solution 1 - C#
TimeSpan duration = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(1);
duration = TimeSpan.FromTicks(duration.Ticks * 12);
Console.WriteLine(duration);
Solution 2 - C#
For those wishing to copy and paste:
namespace Utility
{
public static class TimeSpanExtension
{
/// <summary>
/// Multiplies a timespan by an integer value
/// </summary>
public static TimeSpan Multiply(this TimeSpan multiplicand, int multiplier)
{
return TimeSpan.FromTicks(multiplicand.Ticks * multiplier);
}
/// <summary>
/// Multiplies a timespan by a double value
/// </summary>
public static TimeSpan Multiply(this TimeSpan multiplicand, double multiplier)
{
return TimeSpan.FromTicks((long)(multiplicand.Ticks * multiplier));
}
}
}
Example Usage:
using Utility;
private static void Example()
{
TimeSpan t = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(30).Multiply(5);
}
t
will end up as 150 seconds.
Solution 3 - C#
TimeSpan.Multiply
has arrived in .NET Core, and looks like it will arrive in .NET Standard 2.1:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.timespan.op_multiply?view=netstandard-2.1
var result = 3.0 * TimeSpan.FromSeconds(3);
Solution 4 - C#
The TimeSpan
structure does not provide an overload for the *
operator, so you have to do this yourself:
var result = TimeSpan.FromTicks(duration.Ticks * 5);
Solution 5 - C#
Multiply is now available for TimeSpan!!!
But only for .NET Core, .NET Standard and .NET 5+.
Since .NET Core 2.0 (or .NET Standard 2.1) you can successfully run the following code:
Console.WriteLine(TimeSpan.FromSeconds(45) * 3);
// Prints:
// 00:02:15
Limitations
Nevertheless, it is important to note (as described in the docu) that this only applies for .NET Core 2.0+, .NET Standard 2.1+, and of course .NET 5+.
The code above will fail even in the latest .NET Framework version: 4.8 (which is actually the last version of .NET Framework!).
If you try the code above in a Console application, for example, running .NET Core 1.1 or lower, or .NET Framework 4.8 or lower you will be thrown the following exception:
> Microsoft.CSharp.RuntimeBinder.RuntimeBinderException: 'Operator '*' cannot be applied to operands of type 'System.TimeSpan' and 'int''
Why not in .NET Framework?
In order to try to understand why some features will be added to .Net Core but not to .NET Framework, it is enlightening to see what Immo says:
> .NET Core is the open source, cross-platform, and fast-moving version of .NET. Because of its side-by-side nature it can take changes that we can’t risk applying back to .NET Framework. This means that .NET Core will get new APIs and language features over time that .NET Framework cannot. At Build we showed a demo how the file APIs are faster on .NET Core. If we put those same changes into .NET Framework we could break existing applications, and we don’t want to do that.
Solution 6 - C#
You can use the internal data of TimeSpan, namely ticks.
TimeSpan day = TimeSpan.FromDays(1);
TimeSpan week = TimeSpan.FromTicks(day.Ticks * 7);
Solution 7 - C#
Solution 8 - C#
You need to specify which member it is you want to multiply by 5 -> TimeSpan.TotalMinutes * 5
Solution 9 - C#
The problem here is that you want to multiply timespan. The simplest workaround is to use ticks. eg.
var ticks = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(1).Ticks;
var newTimeSpan = TimeSpan.FromTicks(ticks*5);