Is there between DateTime in C# ? I know I can do simple check with if (a > date1 && a < date2)
but I was trying to find Between
method.
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3Between in SQL is inclusive, your example is exclusive.– Richard SchneiderMay 11, 2014 at 7:12
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I suspect the .net framework team punted on providing a helper due to the combinations of inclusive and exclusive on either end.– Sean BMar 8, 2018 at 21:06
10 Answers
There is not a Between
function but should be easy enough to add one
public static bool Between(DateTime input, DateTime date1, DateTime date2)
{
return (input > date1 && input < date2);
}
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7
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35
public static bool IsBetween(this DateTime input, DateTime date1, DateTime date2) { return (input >= date1 && input <= date2); }
i guess this could be bit nicer :-)– MadBoyApr 18, 2011 at 21:20 -
9It should be noted that the SQL Between statement translates to
Value >= date1 And Value <= date2
. I.e., it is inclusive of the endpoints (one of the reasons I'm not fond of SQL's between is exactly for this reason: it isn't obvious).– ThomasApr 18, 2011 at 21:31
Why restrict to just dates, use the IComparable
interface.
public static bool InclusiveBetween (this IComparable a, IComparable b, IComparable c)
{
return a.CompareTo(b) >= 0 && a.CompareTo(c) <= 0;
}
public static bool ExclusiveBetween (this IComparable a, IComparable b, IComparable c)
{
return a.CompareTo(b) > 0 && a.CompareTo(c) < 0;
}
public static bool SqlBetween (this IComparable a, IComparable b, IComparable c)
{
return a.InclusiveBetween(b, c);
}
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1It doesn't compile, Add a ( at the beggining of return and the end ;– e4rthdogFeb 25, 2013 at 9:12
No, there is not.
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5I would have added a function like everyone else did, but the question included valid code already. It seemed redundant. Cheers!– DavidApr 18, 2011 at 21:30
FWIW, BETWEEN is inclusive, not exclusive WRT to its bounds. Anyway, here you go:
public static bool Between(this DateTime instant, DateTime dtFrom , DateTime dtThru )
{
if (dtFrom > dtThru) throw new ArgumentException( "dtFrom may not be after dtThru", "dtFrom" );
bool isBetween = ( instant >= dtFrom && instant <= dtThru );
return isBetween;
}
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1Why assign the value to isBetween instead of just returning it? But I have to give you props for being the first person to realize Between is inclusive.– juharrApr 18, 2011 at 21:24
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Facilitates debugging/logging (not that this should require a lot of either, but it's good to try and set an example for doing things the Right Way). Apr 18, 2011 at 21:25
Building on @richardschneider answer, my solution adds a boundary range type as a parameter.
public enum RangeBoundaryType
{
[Description("Exclusive")]
Exclusive,
[Description("Inclusive on both boundaries")]
Inclusive,
[Description("Inclusive on only the lower boundary")]
InclusiveLowerBoundaryOnly,
[Description("Inclusive on only the upper boundary")]
InclusiveUpperBoundaryOnly
}
public static bool Between(this IComparable value, IComparable comparator0, IComparable comparator1, RangeBoundaryType rangeBoundary)
{
switch (rangeBoundary)
{
case RangeBoundaryType.Exclusive:
return (value.CompareTo(comparator0) > 0 && value.CompareTo(comparator1) < 0);
case RangeBoundaryType.Inclusive:
return (value.CompareTo(comparator0) >= 0 && value.CompareTo(comparator1) <= 0);
case RangeBoundaryType.InclusiveLowerBoundaryOnly:
return (value.CompareTo(comparator0) >= 0 && value.CompareTo(comparator1) < 0);
case RangeBoundaryType.InclusiveUpperBoundaryOnly:
return (value.CompareTo(comparator0) > 0 && value.CompareTo(comparator1) <= 0);
default:
return false;
}
}
This way is fast and the parameters are reversible:
public static bool BetweenInclusive(this DateTime value, DateTime a, DateTime b)
{
return ((a <= value) && (value <= b)) || ((b <= value) && (value <= a));
}
You can add an extension method :
public static Boolean Between(this DateTime input, DateTime minDate, DateTime maxDate)
{
// SQL takes limit in !
return input >= minDate && input <= maxDate;
}
I use something similar to Richard Schneider's (universal between) and Gary Pendlebury's answer (simpler configurable boundary inclusion)
public static bool Between(this IComparable value, IComparable lowerBoundary, IComparable upperBoundary,
bool includeLowerBoundary=true, bool includeUpperBoundary=true)
{
var lower = value.CompareTo(lowerBoundary);
var upper = value.CompareTo(upperBoundary);
return (lower > 0 || (includeLowerBoundary && lower == 0)) &&
(upper < 0 || (includeUpperBoundary && upper == 0));
}
There is not, but if you obey number line formatting per Code Complete, the raw code looks simpler:
if((lowDate < a) && (a < highDate))
My version (build on @richardschneider answer) with parametrized inclusivity:
public static bool IsBetween(this IComparable value, IComparable lower, IComparable upper, bool isInclusive = true)
{
if (isInclusive)
{
return value.CompareTo(lower) >= 0 && value.CompareTo(upper) <= 0;
}
else
{
return value.CompareTo(lower) > 0 && value.CompareTo(upper) < 0;
}
}
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