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I just stumbled upon an exception: System.ArgumentOutOfRangeException: Year, Month, and Day parameters describe an un-representable DateTime. When I select the date 31st of May, 2015 in a DatePicker in my app, I got the exception. After googling it, I found this post on SO, where this answer seems to describe the exception I met. The answer regards February, with leap years in mind though. Why would it crash on 4-31-2015, but not any other date I've tried? It occurred on Android 4.4.4 as well as 5.0.2. Please help me!

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  • @samgak I appreciate you pointing this out, but my question regards May, not Februari. May 21, 2015 at 12:18
  • 4-31 is April, not May
    – samgak
    May 21, 2015 at 12:19

1 Answer 1

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DatePicker uses 0-based months:

monthOfYear The initial month starting from zero.

whereas DateTime is numbers the months from one:

month The month (1 through 12).

So when setting a DateTime from a DatePicker you need to add 1. April, June, September and November have only 30 days, so without this conversion May (0-based 4) 31st will end up as April 31st which is an invalid date.

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  • The DatePicker returns the month as 1 less than the gregorian calendar would. So, January would be 0, whereas May would be 4. In order to avoid this exception, should I add +1 to the month when setting the DateTime? May 21, 2015 at 12:27
  • Yes that's correct, DateTime is 1-based, so you have to add one.
    – samgak
    May 21, 2015 at 13:19

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