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I am retrieving WMI win32_process information and trying to convert the CreationDate into something a little more readable

$Header = @("__SERVER","Caption","CommandLine","CreationDate","ProcessID")
$processes = Get-WmiObject win32_process -ComputerName theComputer |? {$_.caption -eq "java.exe"} | select $header 
#Format-Date
$processes | % {
        $crdate = $_.CreationDate
        if($crdate -match ".\d*-\d*") {
            $crdate = $crdate -replace $matches[0]," "
            $idate = [System.Int64]$crdate
            $date = [DateTime]::ParseExact($idate,'yyyyMMddhhmmss',$null)
            $_.CreationDate = $date             
        }
    }

This function works great, but sometimes fails with the error message: Exception calling "ParseExact" with "3" argument(s): "String was not recognized as a valid DateTime."

I'm aware I am passing in an int, I also tried converting $idate to a String and passing that in, but it errored on the same value.

Sample Input:(value of $idate right before ParseExact call)
20130719113954
20130719114700
20130719133000 <---- This fails
20130719053000
20130719060001
20130719134000 <---- This fails

So clearly this function only works before 12:00

My question is how do I get this to recognize military time? Before 12, it will spit me out a great date that looks like 7/19/2013 11:47:00 AM. How would parse exact know the difference between AM and PM if it does not accept military time?

Note: win32_process originally returns a CreationDate value like 20130719133000.137239-240 But I wasn't able to parse that at all, and I really don't care about milliseconds.

2 Answers 2

8

Make the format string yyyyMMddHHmmss. hh is for 12-hour format, HH for 24-hour format. See here.

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  • Could not find for the life of me how to get military time with milliseconds. Thank you so much for the tip about the HH for the hours!
    – JFV
    Dec 15, 2016 at 23:13
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You most likely figured this out already, but I noticed you had '$.CreationDate = $date' at the end of the 'if' statement in your foreach loop; Since $.CreationDate was already declared you could probably eliminate/comment-out that part to avoid possible "Type mismatch" errors.

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  • Nope sorry, there are no "type mismatch errors" in powershell. its '$_.CreationDate' not '$.CreationDate' ... and creation date isn't something you declare it's just a property of the process type. $_ just means the object in the pipe.. in this instance. $_ refers to each process since I'm am piping $processes to a for each loop. $_.CreationDate just gets the creation date of the current process
    – Cole9350
    Nov 25, 2013 at 21:59

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