112

I was playing around with the Datetime.ParseExact method, and it wants an IFormatProvider...

It works giving null as input, but what exactly does it do?

1

9 Answers 9

77

In adition to Ian Boyd's answer:

Also CultureInfo implements this interface and can be used in your case. So you could parse a French date string for example; you could use

var ci = new CultureInfo("fr-FR");
DateTime dt = DateTime.ParseExact(yourDateInputString, yourFormatString, ci);
3
  • 4
    There doesn't seem to be an overload that matches your example anymore in the .NET Framework 4.6. You must use DateTime.ParseExact(string, string, IFormatProvider) instead, I believe - as such: DateTime.ParseExact("20160409 111559","yyyyMMdd HHmmss",CultureInfo.CurrentCulture)
    – James King
    Apr 10, 2016 at 20:39
  • 1
    In .NET Framework 4.6.2 there is no input parameters as you point. I use only two and it works fine DateTime dt = DateTime.Parse(yourDateInputString, ci); Please revise your answer.
    – NoWar
    May 23, 2018 at 1:27
  • 2
    Sorry guys, a long overdue update has been made to my answer. May 30, 2018 at 11:55
59

The IFormatProvider interface is normally implemented for you by a CultureInfo class, e.g.:

  • CultureInfo.CurrentCulture
  • CultureInfo.CurrentUICulture
  • CultureInfo.InvariantCulture
  • CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("de-CA") //German (Canada)

The interface is a gateway for a function to get a set of culture-specific data from a culture. The two commonly available culture objects that an IFormatProvider can be queried for are:

The way it would normally work is you ask the IFormatProvider to give you a DateTimeFormatInfo object:

DateTimeFormatInfo? format;
format = (DateTimeFormatInfo)provider.GetFormat(typeof(DateTimeFormatInfo));
if (format != null)
   DoStuffWithDatesOrTimes(format);

There's also inside knowledge that any IFormatProvider interface is likely being implemented by a class that descends from CultureInfo, or descends from DateTimeFormatInfo, so you could cast the interface directly:

CultureInfo? info = provider as CultureInfo;
if (info != null)
   format = info.DateTimeInfo;
else
{
   DateTimeFormatInfo? dtfi = provider as DateTimeFormatInfo;
   if (dtfi != null)
       format = dtfi;
   else
       format = (DateTimeFormatInfo)provider.GetFormat(typeof(DateTimeFormatInfo));
}

if (format != null)
   DoStuffWithDatesOrTimes(format);

But don't do that

All that hard work has already been written for you:

To get a DateTimeFormatInfo from an IFormatProvider:

DateTimeFormatInfo format = DateTimeFormatInfo.GetInstance(provider);

To get a NumberFormatInfo from an IFormatProvider:

NumberFormatInfo format = NumberFormatInfo.GetInstance(provider);

The virtue of IFormatProvider is that you create your own culture objects. As long as they implement IFormatProvider, and return objects they're asked for, you can bypass the built-in cultures.

You can also use IFormatProvider for a way of passing arbitrary culture objects - through the IFormatProvider. E.g. the name of god in different cultures

  • god
  • God
  • Jehova
  • Yahwe
  • יהוה
  • אהיה אשר אהיה

This lets your custom LordsNameFormatInfo class ride along inside an IFormatProvider, and you can preserve the idiom.

In reality you will never need to call GetFormat method of IFormatProvider yourself.

Whenever you need an IFormatProvider you can pass a CultureInfo object:

DateTime.Now.ToString(CultureInfo.CurrentCulture);

endTime.ToString(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);

transactionID.toString(CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("qps-ploc"));

Note: Any code is released into the public domain. No attribution required.

0
22

Passing null as the IFormatProvider is not the correct way to do this. If the user has a custom date/time format on their PC you'll have issues in parsing and converting to string. I've just fixed a bug where somebody had passed null as the IFormatProvider when converting to string.

Instead you should be using CultureInfo.InvariantCulture

Wrong:

string output = theDate.ToString("dd/MM/yy HH:mm:ss.fff", null);

Correct:

string output = theDate.ToString("dd/MM/yy HH:mm:ss.fff", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
4
  • 2
    Is there any reason we should use CultureInfo.InvariantCulture instead of CultureInfo.CurrentCulture? Mar 11, 2013 at 17:47
  • 5
    InvariantCulture is a special culture which is guaranteed to always exist on any machine and will always convert and parse back to the same values. CurrentCulture is the culture of the current thread. This can vary and if you don't use the same culture to convert to string and parse, you'll get format errors...
    – Tim
    Mar 11, 2013 at 22:25
  • 5
    @StephenBooher passing in null will default to CultureInfo.CurrentCulture. See the call in the reference source, if you follow the chain of calls along, the null eventually gets replaced with DateTimeFormatInfo.CurrentInfo which is equivalent to what CultureInfo.CurrentCulture outputs. Sep 25, 2014 at 15:24
  • InvariantCulture is what I was looking for. Thanks
    – Chicowitz
    Feb 15, 2019 at 15:57
5

IFormatProvider provides culture info to the method in question. DateTimeFormatInfo implements IFormatProvider, and allows you to specify the format you want your date/time to be displayed in. Examples can be found on the relevant MSDN pages.

4

You can see here http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.iformatprovider.aspx

See the remarks and example section there.

1
  • 13
    Ironically the sample code for IFormatProvider doesn't use IFormatProvider.
    – Ian Boyd
    Aug 12, 2013 at 18:44
3

By MSDN

The .NET Framework includes the following three predefined IFormatProvider implementations to provide culture-specific information that is used in formatting or parsing numeric and date and time values:

  1. The NumberFormatInfo class, which provides information that is used to format numbers, such as the currency, thousands separator, and decimal separator symbols for a particular culture. For information about the predefined format strings recognized by a NumberFormatInfo object and used in numeric formatting operations, see Standard Numeric Format Strings and Custom Numeric Format Strings.
  2. The DateTimeFormatInfo class, which provides information that is used to format dates and times, such as the date and time separator symbols for a particular culture or the order and format of a date's year, month, and day components. For information about the predefined format strings recognized by a DateTimeFormatInfo object and used in numeric formatting operations, see Standard Date and Time Format Strings and Custom Date and Time Format Strings.
  3. The CultureInfo class, which represents a particular culture. Its GetFormat method returns a culture-specific NumberFormatInfo or DateTimeFormatInfo object, depending on whether the CultureInfo object is used in a formatting or parsing operation that involves numbers or dates and times.

The .NET Framework also supports custom formatting. This typically involves the creation of a formatting class that implements both IFormatProvider and ICustomFormatter. An instance of this class is then passed as a parameter to a method that performs a custom formatting operation, such as String.Format(IFormatProvider, String, Object[]).

2

Check http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.iformatprovider.aspx for the API.

1

The DateTimeFormatInfo class implements this interface, so it allows you to control the formatting of your DateTime strings.

1

The question asks about IFormatProvider and DateTime, but you can use IFormatProvider also in other contexts of .NET, such as for string.Format.

Then you pass in the IFormatProvider instance and you can by implementing IFormatProvider specify how the string is formatted for an object. So the usage of IFormatProvider and a related ICustomFormatter interface is more broad in .NET than just for dates.

E.g. consider this implementation :

using System;

namespace ConsoleApp
{
    class EmployeeProductivityFormatProvider : IFormatProvider, ICustomFormatter
    {
        public string Format(string format, object arg, IFormatProvider formatProvider)
        {
            int rating = (int)arg;

            if (rating == 0)
            {
                return $"{rating} (new employee)";
            }

            if (rating > 0)
            {
                return $"{rating} (good employee)";
            }

            return $"{rating} (bad employee)";
        }

        public object GetFormat(Type formatType)
        {
            if (formatType == typeof(ICustomFormatter))
            {
                return this;
            }

            return null;
        }
    }
}

Now we can get a string representation of an employee by specifying an int value like this:

    string prod = string.Format(new EmployeeProductivityFormatProvider(),
                                "Productivity rating: {0}",
                                employee.ProductivityRating);

When it comes to DateTime, there are a lot of already created IFormatProvider implementation to choose from. This is a very flexible way of representating objects to strings and specifying their format in .NET and a very general concept.

1
  • Exactly the implementation i was looking for. I am trying to construct a Type Mapper pipeline. Your answer helped me with the last piece of puzzle. Source Type -> Primitive Type Conversion (using Func <Source.Target> for now) ->Type-Constraint Identification (using predicates) -> Type Formatter Application (using IFormatProvider and iCustomFormatter) -> Target Type . I dream of a day when computer can auto cast a type.
    – N_E
    Jan 8, 2022 at 6:36

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