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I have the following string:

Updated: 15:14 03/10

I wish to convert it to datetime format in order to insert it into a datetime field within sql server.

string date = 'Updated: 15:14 03/10';
    string updatedTime = date.Split(' ')[0];
    string updatedDate = date.Split(' ')[1];
    string updatedMonth = updatedDate.Split('/')[1];
    string updatedDay = updatedDate.Split('/')[0];
    string updatedYear = DateTime.UtcNow.Year.ToString();
    string updated = updatedYear + '-' + updatedMonth + '-' + updatedDay + ' ' + updatedTime;
DateTime dt = Convert.ToDateTime(updated);

Is this there a cleaner / more efficient way of doing this?

2 Answers 2

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You could use DateTime.ParseExact with the correct format string. Something like this:

string date = "Updated: 15:14 03/10";
string modifiedDate = date.Replace("Updated: ", "");
string format = "HH:mm dd/MM";
DateTime parsedDate = DateTime.ParseExact(modifiedDate, format, CultureInfo.CurrentCulture);

Edit Actually, you don't need the year in the format string; the DateTime parser is smart enough to assume the current year.

Edit #2 If you wanted to get cheeky, you could include the "Updated" part in the format string. It's a bit ugly though, because you need to escape the characters d, t, and :.

string date = "Updated: 15:14 03/10";
string format = @"Up\da\te\d\: HH:mm dd/MM";
DateTime parsedDate = DateTime.ParseExact(date, format, CultureInfo.CurrentCulture);
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It is always that form? If so, it looks like you should be able to do:

string trimmed = text.Substring("Updated: ".Length);
DateTime dateTime = DateTime.ParseExact(trimmed, "HH:mm dd/MM",
                                        CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);

It's possible that this would work too, but I haven't tried it:

DateTime dateTime = DateTime.ParseExact(text, "'Updated: 'HH:mm dd/MM",
                                        CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);

It's not clear whether you're expecting the result to be local or UTC, by the way - you can specify various options via DateTimeStyles.

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