When you describe the original date object you lose some sub-second precision from the original object — in other words, -description
shaves off fractional seconds, and returns
A string representation of the receiver in the international format YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS ±HHMM
, where ±HHMM
represents the time zone offset in hours and minutes from GMT
When you create a new date object based on the description, you get it in whole seconds because the string is only precise to a whole second. So -isEqualToDate:
returns NO
because there is a difference of a fraction of a second between your two date objects, which it's sensitive to.
This method detects sub-second differences between dates. If you want to compare dates with a less fine granularity, use timeIntervalSinceDate:
to compare the two dates.
So you'd do something like this instead (NSTimeInterval
measures in seconds):
if ([d timeIntervalSinceDate:dd] == 0) {
NSLog(@"Yay!");
}