Convert NSDate to String in iOS Swift [duplicate] - ios

This question already has answers here:
Convert NSDate to NSString
(19 answers)
Closed 5 years ago.
I am trying to convert a NSDate to a String and then Change Format. But when I pass NSDate to String it is producing whitespace.
let formatter = DateFormatter()
let myString = (String(describing: date))
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"
let yourDate: Date? = formatter.date(from: myString)
formatter.dateFormat = "dd-MMM-yyyy"
print(yourDate)

you get the detail information from Apple Dateformatter Document.If you want to set the dateformat for your dateString, see this link , the detail dateformat you can get here
for e.g , do like
let formatter = DateFormatter()
// initially set the format based on your datepicker date / server String
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"
let myString = formatter.string(from: Date()) // string purpose I add here
// convert your string to date
let yourDate = formatter.date(from: myString)
//then again set the date format whhich type of output you need
formatter.dateFormat = "dd-MMM-yyyy"
// again convert your date to string
let myStringDate = formatter.string(from: yourDate!)
print(myStringDate)
you get the output as

I always use this code while converting Date to String . (Swift 3)
extension Date
{
func toString( dateFormat format : String ) -> String
{
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = format
return dateFormatter.string(from: self)
}
}
and call like this . .
let today = Date()
today.toString(dateFormat: "dd-MM")

DateFormatter has some factory date styles for those too lazy to tinker with formatting strings. If you don't need a custom style, here's another option:
extension Date {
func asString(style: DateFormatter.Style) -> String {
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateStyle = style
return dateFormatter.string(from: self)
}
}
This gives you the following styles:
short, medium, long, full
Example usage:
let myDate = Date()
myDate.asString(style: .full) // Wednesday, January 10, 2018
myDate.asString(style: .long) // January 10, 2018
myDate.asString(style: .medium) // Jan 10, 2018
myDate.asString(style: .short) // 1/10/18

Your updated code.update it.
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"
let myString = formatter.string(from: date as Date)
let yourDate: Date? = formatter.date(from: myString)
formatter.dateFormat = "dd-MMM-yyyy"
print(yourDate!)

Something to keep in mind when creating formatters is to try to reuse the same instance if you can, as formatters are fairly computationally expensive to create. The following is a pattern I frequently use for apps where I can share the same formatter app-wide, adapted from NSHipster.
extension DateFormatter {
static var sharedDateFormatter: DateFormatter = {
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
// Add your formatter configuration here
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"
return dateFormatter
}()
}
Usage:
let dateString = DateFormatter.sharedDateFormatter.string(from: Date())

After allocating DateFormatter you need to give the formatted string
then you can convert as string like this way
var date = Date()
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"
let myString = formatter.string(from: date)
let yourDate: Date? = formatter.date(from: myString)
formatter.dateFormat = "dd-MMM-yyyy"
let updatedString = formatter.string(from: yourDate!)
print(updatedString)
OutPut
01-Mar-2017

You can use this extension:
extension Date {
func toString(withFormat format: String) -> String {
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = format
let myString = formatter.string(from: self)
let yourDate = formatter.date(from: myString)
formatter.dateFormat = format
return formatter.string(from: yourDate!)
}
}
And use it in your view controller like this (replace <"yyyy"> with your format):
yourString = yourDate.toString(withFormat: "yyyy")

Related

Convert Date from one format to another

I trying to convert date from one format to another. But the date in the below code is coming as nil. Can you guys help me out below is the code.
func eventTimeDate() -> Date {
let dtf = DateFormatter()
dtf.timeZone = TimeZone.current
dtf.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss z"
/// "2020-05-28 00:20:00 GMT+5:30"
let stringDate = dtf.string(from: self)
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss z"
/// nil
let date = dateFormatter.date(from: stringDate)
return date!
}
If you need to convert from one formatted date string to another formatted date string, you can use two DateFormatters: one - an input formatter to convert a String to an intermediary Date object, and then - using an output formatter - convert from Date to String.
func reFormat(from dateStr: String) -> String? {
let fromFormatter = DateFormatter()
fromFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss z"
let toFormatter = DateFormatter()
toFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss z"
guard let date = fromFormatter.date(from: dateStr) else { return nil }
return toFormatter.string(from: date)
}
If you just need to return a Date object, then it's a simpler function using just one DateFormatter:
func toDate(from dateStr: String) -> Date? {
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss z"
return formatter.date(from: dateStr)
}
Date object itself has no formatting - it's a pure representation of a date & time, which you can convert to/from using different formatters.
A swift class Date has no format.
In your code your stringDate is in "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss z" format. If you need to convert String to Date you must use the same format otherwise it will return nil.
If you want to change a format of a string then first convert it to a Swift 'Date' then again convert it to a string with the use of new Formatter.
func eventTimeDate(dateString : String, currentFormat : String, newFormat : String) -> String? {
let currentDateFormatter = DateFormatter()
currentDateFormatter.calendar = Calendar(identifier: Calendar.Identifier.gregorian)
currentDateFormatter.locale = Locale(identifier: "en_IN")
currentDateFormatter.dateFormat = currentFormat
let date = currentDateFormatter.date(from: dateString)
let newDateFormatter = DateFormatter()
newDateFormatter.calendar = Calendar(identifier: Calendar.Identifier.gregorian)
newDateFormatter.locale = Locale(identifier: "en_IN")
newDateFormatter.dateFormat = newFormat
if let date = date {
let newDateString = newDateFormatter.string(from: date)
return newDateString
}
return nil
}
You have three problems in your code. First when parsing a fixed date format you should always set the date formatter's locale to "en_US_POSIX". Second you need to escape the GMT of your date string. Last but not least important you need to fix your timezone string which it is missing the leading zero for your timezone hour:
let dateStr = "2020-05-28 00:20:00 GMT+5:30"
let formatter = DateFormatter()
// set the date formatter's locale to "en_US_POSIX"
formatter.locale = .init(identifier: "en_US_POSIX")
// escape the GMT of your date string
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss 'GMT'Z"
// add the leading zero for your timezone hour
let string = dateStr.replacingOccurrences(of: "(GMT[+-])(\\d:)", with: "$10$2", options: .regularExpression)
if let date = formatter.date(from: string) {
print(date) // "2020-05-27 18:50:00 +0000\n"
}

Date in Swift 3 conversion

I want this date "2016-10-18 22:06:20 +0000" to "18-10-2016", is this possible? I managed to get the date as follows:
var formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = "yyy-MM-dd'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"
let stringDate = formatter.string(from: currentDate)
The above gives me "10/18/16", but how can I get "18-10-2016"?
Solution in Swift 3
extension Foundation.Date {
func dashedStringFromDate() -> String {
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
let date = self
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "dd-MM-yyyy"
return dateFormatter.string(from: date)
}
}
Example
let date = Foundation.Date()
let formatedDate = date.dashedStringFromDate()
Little about what you put in your question makes a lot of sense. You don't have a date as 2016-10-18 22:06:20 +0000. The code you posted converts a current Date into a string. But you claim you want that string to be in the format 18-10-2016 but your code uses a completely different format.
Why not just do:
var formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = "dd-MM-yyyy"
let stringDate = formatter.string(from: currentDate)
This will convert the currentDate to a string in the format you mention in your question.
If you really have a string in the format of 2016-10-18 22:06:20 +0000 and you want to convert it to 18-10-2016, then you want two date formatters.
The first convert that original string to a date:
let string = "2016-10-18 22:06:20 +0000"
let formatter1 = DateFormatter()
formatter1.locale = Locale(identifier: "en_US_POSIX") // if this string was from web service or a database, you should set the locale
formatter1.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss Z"
guard let date = formatter1.date(from: string) else {
fatalError("Couldn't parse original date string")
}
If you then want to build a new string in the format of 18-10-2016, then you'd use a second formatter:
let formatter2 = DateFormatter()
formatter2.dateFormat = "dd-MM-yyyy"
let result = formatter2.string(from: date)

How to convert date format from dd/MM/YYYY to YYYY-MM-dd in swift [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Format a date from a string
(5 answers)
Closed 6 years ago.
I tired to covert from 21/07/2016 to 2016-07-21 but got this date 2015-12-20
Here is the Code that i have try
let inputFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
inputFormatter.dateFormat = "MM/dd/YYYY"
let outputFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
outputFormatter.dateFormat = "YYYY-MM-dd"
let showDate = inputFormatter.dateFromString("07/21/2016")
let resultString = outputFormatter.stringFromDate(showDate!)
print(resultString)
How to convert?
Thank you
First changes your year formatter with yyyy and instead of using two NSDateFormatter use just one like this
let inputFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
inputFormatter.dateFormat = "MM/dd/yyyy"
let showDate = inputFormatter.dateFromString("07/21/2016")
inputFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"
let resultString = inputFormatter.stringFromDate(showDate!)
print(resultString)
For Swift3 and later
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "MM/dd/yyyy"
let date = dateFormatter.date(from: date)
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"
let resultString = dateFormatter.string(from: date!)
print(resultString)
You can define a function like the one below:
// input string should always be in format "21/07/2016" ("dd/MM/yyyy")
func formattedDateFromString(dateString: String, withFormat format: String) -> String? {
let inputFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
inputFormatter.dateFormat = "dd/MM/yyyy"
if let date = inputFormatter.dateFromString(dateString) {
let outputFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
outputFormatter.dateFormat = format
return outputFormatter.stringFromDate(date)
}
return nil
}
You can use the above to pass an output format for your date string. Input format will always be dd/MM/yyyy. Then you use it as follows:
let stringA = formattedDateFromString("21/07/2016", withFormat: "yyyy-MM-dd")
let stringB = formattedDateFromString("21/07/2016", withFormat: "MMM dd, yyyy")
NSLog("stringA: \(stringA)") // 2016-07-21
NSLog("stringB: \(stringB)") // Jul 21, 2016

Convert date string swift

I have a date string in this format:
2016-06-20T13:01:46.457+02:00
and I need to change it to something like this:
20/06/2016
Previously I have always used this library -> SwiftDate to manipulate the dates, but it doesn't work now.
I tried also something like:
let myDate = self.dateNoteDict[indexPath.row]!
let dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss.SSSSxxx"
let date = dateFormatter.dateFromString(myDate)
print("date -> \(date)")
but it doesn't work. How can I do?
Thanks in advance.
The standard ISO8601 date format with fractional seconds and time zone is
yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ
let myDate = "2016-06-20T13:01:46.457+02:00"
let dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter.locale = NSLocale(localeIdentifier: "en_US_POSIX") // edited
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"
let date = dateFormatter.dateFromString(myDate)!
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "dd/MM/yyyy"
let dateString = dateFormatter.stringFromDate(date)
Swift 3:
let myDate = "2016-06-20T13:01:46.457+02:00"
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.locale = Locale(identifier: "en_US_POSIX") // edited
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"
let date = dateFormatter.date(from:myDate)!
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "dd/MM/yyyy"
let dateString = dateFormatter.string(from:date)
In macOS 10.13+, iOS 11+ ISO8601DateFormatter is an alternative as input formatter
let myDate = "2016-06-20T13:01:46.457+02:00"
let inputFormatter = ISO8601DateFormatter()
inputFormatter.formatOptions = [.withFullDate, .withFullTime, .withFractionalSeconds]
let date = dateFormatter.date(from:myDate)!
let outputFormatter = DateFormatter()
outputFormatter.locale = Locale(identifier: "en_US_POSIX")
outputFormatter.dateFormat = "dd/MM/yyyy"
let dateString = dateFormatter.string(from:date)
I always use this code while converting String to Date .
(Swift 3)
extension String
{
func toDate( dateFormat format : String) -> Date
{
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = format
if let date = dateFormatter.date(from: self)
{
return date
}
print("Invalid arguments ! Returning Current Date . ")
return Date()
}
}
and just call like . .
print ( "2016-06-20T13:01:46.457+02:00".toDate(dateFormat: "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ") )
//Capital HH for 24-Hour Time
I always use this code while converting String to Date. (Swift 4.2)
let myDate = datePicker.date
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"
let date = myDate
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "dd/MM/yyyy"
let dateString = dateFormatter.string(from:date)
print(dateString)
You can try manually also:
let myDate = "2019-02-22T08:21:11+0000"
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"
let date = myDate
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "dd/MM/yyyy"
let dateString = dateFormatter.string(from:date)
print(dateString)

How can I convert string date to NSDate?

I want to convert "2014-07-15 06:55:14.198000+00:00" this string date to NSDate in Swift.
try this:
let dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = /* find out and place date format from
* http://userguide.icu-project.org/formatparse/datetime
*/
let date = dateFormatter.dateFromString(/* your_date_string */)
For further query, check NSDateFormatter and DateFormatter classes of Foundation framework for Objective-C and Swift, respectively.
Swift 3 and later
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = /* date_format_you_want_in_string from
* http://userguide.icu-project.org/formatparse/datetime
*/
guard let date = dateFormatter.date(from: /* your_date_string */) else {
fatalError("ERROR: Date conversion failed due to mismatched format.")
}
// use date constant here
Edit:
Alternative date time format reference
https://unicode-org.github.io/icu/userguide/format_parse/datetime/
Swift 4
import Foundation
let dateString = "2014-07-15" // change to your date format
var dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"
let date = dateFormatter.date(from: dateString)
println(date)
Swift 3
import Foundation
var dateString = "2014-07-15" // change to your date format
var dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"
var date = dateFormatter.dateFromString(dateString)
println(date)
I can do it with this code.
func convertDateFormatter(date: String) -> String
{
let dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"//this your string date format
dateFormatter.timeZone = NSTimeZone(name: "UTC")
let date = dateFormatter.dateFromString(date)
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy MMM EEEE HH:mm"///this is what you want to convert format
dateFormatter.timeZone = NSTimeZone(name: "UTC")
let timeStamp = dateFormatter.stringFromDate(date!)
return timeStamp
}
Updated for Swift 3.
func convertDateFormatter(date: String) -> String
{
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"//this your string date format
dateFormatter.timeZone = NSTimeZone(name: "UTC") as TimeZone!
let date = dateFormatter.date(from: date)
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy MMM EEEE HH:mm"///this is what you want to convert format
dateFormatter.timeZone = NSTimeZone(name: "UTC") as TimeZone!
let timeStamp = dateFormatter.string(from: date!)
return timeStamp
}
Details
Swift 4, Xcode 9.2
Swift 5, Xcode 10.2 (10E125)
Solution
import Foundation
extension DateFormatter {
convenience init (format: String) {
self.init()
dateFormat = format
locale = Locale.current
}
}
extension String {
func toDate (dateFormatter: DateFormatter) -> Date? {
return dateFormatter.date(from: self)
}
func toDateString (dateFormatter: DateFormatter, outputFormat: String) -> String? {
guard let date = toDate(dateFormatter: dateFormatter) else { return nil }
return DateFormatter(format: outputFormat).string(from: date)
}
}
extension Date {
func toString (dateFormatter: DateFormatter) -> String? {
return dateFormatter.string(from: self)
}
}
Usage
var dateString = "14.01.2017T14:54:00"
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter(format: "dd.MM.yyyy'T'HH:mm:ss")
let date = Date()
print("original String with date: \(dateString)")
print("date String() to Date(): \(dateString.toDate(dateFormatter: dateFormatter)!)")
print("date String() to formated date String(): \(dateString.toDateString(dateFormatter: dateFormatter, outputFormat: "dd MMMM")!)")
let dateFormatter2 = DateFormatter(format: "dd MMM HH:mm")
print("format Date(): \(date.toString(dateFormatter: dateFormatter2)!)")
Result
More information
About date format
If you're going to need to parse the string into a date often, you may want to move the functionality into an extension. I created a sharedCode.swift file and put my extensions there:
extension String
{
func toDateTime() -> NSDate
{
//Create Date Formatter
let dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
//Specify Format of String to Parse
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss.SSSSxxx"
//Parse into NSDate
let dateFromString : NSDate = dateFormatter.dateFromString(self)!
//Return Parsed Date
return dateFromString
}
}
Then if you want to convert your string into a NSDate you can just write something like:
var myDate = myDateString.toDateTime()
For Swift 3
func stringToDate(_ str: String)->Date{
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat="yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss Z"
return formatter.date(from: str)!
}
func dateToString(_ str: Date)->String{
var dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.timeStyle=DateFormatter.Style.short
return dateFormatter.string(from: str)
}
The code fragments on this QA page are "upside down"...
The first thing Apple mentions is that you cache your formatter...
Link to Apple doco stating exactly how to do this:
Cache Formatters for Efficiency
Creating a date formatter is not a cheap operation. ...cache a single instance...
Use a global...
let df : DateFormatter = {
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd"
return formatter
}()
Then simply use that formatter anywhere...
let s = df.string(from: someDate)
or
let d = df.date(from: someString)
Or use any of the other many, many convenient methods on DateFormatter.
It is that simple.
(If you write an extension on String, your code is completely "upside down" - you can't use any dateFormatter calls!)
Note that usually you will have a few of those globals .. such as "formatForClient" "formatForPubNub" "formatForDisplayOnInvoiceScreen" .. etc.
Swift support extensions, with extension you can add a new functionality to an existing class, structure, enumeration, or protocol type.
You can add a new init function to NSDate object by extenging the object using the extension keyword.
extension NSDate
{
convenience
init(dateString:String) {
let dateStringFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateStringFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyyMMdd"
dateStringFormatter.locale = NSLocale(localeIdentifier: "fr_CH_POSIX")
let d = dateStringFormatter.dateFromString(dateString)!
self.init(timeInterval:0, sinceDate:d)
}
}
Now you can init a NSDate object using:
let myDateObject = NSDate(dateString:"2010-12-15 06:00:00")
Since Swift 3, many of the NS prefixes have been dropped.
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"
/* date format string rules
* http://userguide.icu-project.org/formatparse/datetime
*/
let date = dateFormatter.date(from: dateString)
Swift 3,4:
2 useful conversions:
string(from: Date) // to convert from Date to a String
date(from: String) // to convert from String to Date
Usage:
1.
let date = Date() //gives today's date
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "dd.MM.yyyy"
let todaysDateInUKFormat = dateFormatter.string(from: date)
2.
let someDateInString = "23.06.2017"
var getDateFromString = dateFormatter.date(from: someDateInString)
FOR SWIFT 3.1
func convertDateStringToDate(longDate: String) -> String{
/* INPUT: longDate = "2017-01-27T05:00:00.000Z"
* OUTPUT: "1/26/17"
* date_format_you_want_in_string from
* http://userguide.icu-project.org/formatparse/datetime
*/
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"
let date = dateFormatter.date(from: longDate)
if date != nil {
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateStyle = .short
let dateShort = formatter.string(from: date!)
return dateShort
} else {
return longDate
}
}
NOTE: THIS WILL RETURN THE ORIGINAL STRING IF ERROR
To add String within Date Format in Swift, I did this
var dataFormatter:NSDateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dataFormatter.dateFormat = "dd-MMMM 'at' HH:mm a"
cell.timeStamplbl.text = dataFormatter.stringFromDate(object.createdAt)
This work for me..
import Foundation
import UIKit
//dateString = "01/07/2017"
private func parseDate(_ dateStr: String) -> String {
let simpleDateFormat = DateFormatter()
simpleDateFormat.dateFormat = "dd/MM/yyyy" //format our date String
let dateFormat = DateFormatter()
dateFormat.dateFormat = "dd 'de' MMMM 'de' yyyy" //format return
let date = simpleDateFormat.date(from: dateStr)
return dateFormat.string(from: date!)
}
You can try this swift code
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "dd/MM/yyyy"//same as strDate date formator
dateFormatter.timeZone = TimeZone(abbreviation: "GMT+0:00")//Must used if you get one day less in conversion
let convertedDateObject = dateFormatter.date(from: strDate)
Below are some string to date format converting options can be usedin swift iOS.
Thursday, Dec 27, 2018 format= EEEE, MMM d, yyyy
12/27/2018 format= MM/dd/yyyy
12-27-2018 09:59 format= MM-dd-yyyy HH:mm
Dec 27, 9:59 AM format= MMM d, h:mm a
December 2018 format= MMMM yyyy
Dec 27, 2018 format= MMM d, yyyy
Thu, 27 Dec 2018 09:59:19 +0000 format= E, d MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss Z
2018-12-27T09:59:19+0000 format= yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ
27.12.18 format= dd.MM.yy
09:59:19.815 format= HH:mm:ss.SSS
SWIFT 5, Xcode 11.0
Pass your (date in string) in "dateString" and in "dateFormat" pass format you want. To choose format, use NDateFormatter website.
func getDateFrom(dateString: String, dateFormat: String) -> Date? {
let dateFormatter = DateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = dateFormat
dateFormatter.locale = Locale(identifier: "en_US")
guard let date = dateFormatter.date(from: dateString) else {return nil}
return date
}
Swift: iOS
if we have string, convert it to NSDate,
var dataString = profileValue["dob"] as String
var dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
dateFormatter.dateFormat = "MM-dd-yyyy"
// convert string into date
let dateValue:NSDate? = dateFormatter.dateFromString(dataString)
if you have and date picker parse date like this
// to avoid any nil value
if let isDate = dateValue {
self.datePicker.date = isDate
}
import Foundation
let now : String = "2014-07-16 03:03:34 PDT"
var date : NSDate
var dateFormatter : NSDateFormatter
date = dateFormatter.dateFromString(now)
date // $R6: __NSDate = 2014-07-16 03:03:34 PDT
https://developer.apple.com/library/prerelease/mac/documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSDateFormatter_Class/index.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/20000447-SW32

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