1

The method signature for Date.TryParse is:

Public Shared Function TryParseExact ( _
    s As String, _
    format As String, _
    provider As IFormatProvider, _
    style As DateTimeStyles, _
    <OutAttribute> ByRef result As DateTime _
) As Boolean

I understand what format does, but what is the provider parameter for? I understand that you pass in a CultureInfo instance, but am unsure as to what it's purpose is.

Can anyone please enlighten me?

3 Answers 3

8

The provider specifies the culture-specific format information about the date.

For example, you could pass in any of these cultures:

new CultureInfo("en-US")  // USA
new CultureInfo("fr-FR")  // France
new CultureInfo("it-IT")  // Italy
new CultureInfo("de-DE")  // Germany

And you would get the date formatted according to those cultures, such as:

  • en-US: 6/1/2009 4:37:00 PM
  • fr-FR: 01/06/2009 16:37:00
  • it-IT: 01/06/2009 16.37.00
  • de-DE: 01.06.2009 16:37:00

Another example: using the "d" format, which represents the M/d/yyyy short date pattern when using en-US for CultureInfo, consider:

DateTime dateValue;
string[] sampleDates = new[] { "31/8/2009", "8/31/2009" };
foreach (string currentDate in sampleDates)
{
    bool result = DateTime.TryParseExact(currentDate, new[] {"d"}, 
                    new CultureInfo("en-US"), 
                    DateTimeStyles.None, 
                    out dateValue);
    Console.WriteLine("{0}: {1}", currentDate, result ? "valid" : "invalid");
    if (result)
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Result: {0}", dateValue);
    }
    Console.WriteLine();
}

Output:

31/8/2009: invalid

8/31/2009: valid
Result: 8/31/2009 12:00:00 AM

31/8/2009 is invalid since it doesn't fit the en-US culture format of M/d/yyyy, whereas 8/31/2009 is valid since it does.

1

An IFormatProvider is a class that has knowledge of how to format something. TryParseExact needs to ask it (and in this case specifically, a CultureInfo), to see if there are any special culture-specific symbols in the string, such as days of week, AM/PM, etc.

Additionally, if you just pass the format in as one of the standard c# date format specifiers, the format provider must be consulted as to what that exactly translates to for the given culture.

1
  • I see. I was under the impression that the IFormatProvider parameter is something of a "fallback" format matcher in case the format string you pass in does not do the job. Say I try to do: TryParseExact("18/06/2009", "ddMMyyyy", New CultureInfo("en-AU", DateTimeStyles.None, stringToWriteTo) Then TryParseExact will return false and nothing will be written to stringToWriteTo?
    – Andrew
    Sep 3, 2009 at 6:45
0

Dates differ around the world, both in their format and in the words used for months. The IFormatProviders know about this.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.