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I am taking two NSDates by using date time picker. Now I want to count the number of days between these two NSDates. How can I find the difference between two NSDates.

please give me some solution.

Thanks alot.

1

3 Answers 3

57

Here's a little gem for you - with more than just days:

// Assuming you have fistDate and secondDate

unsigned int unitFlags = NSCalendarUnitHour | NSCalendarUnitMinute | NSCalendarUnitDay | NSCalendarUnitMonth;

NSDateComponents *conversionInfo = [currCalendar components:unitFlags fromDate:fistDate   toDate:secondDate  options:0];

int months = [conversionInfo month];
int days = [conversionInfo day];
int hours = [conversionInfo hour];
int minutes = [conversionInfo minute];

This is very helpful - especially when formatting string such as:

[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d months , %d days, %d hours, %d min", months, days, hours, minutes];

Happy Coding :)

3
  • @Dave DeLong Yeah it's a pity people are content to play the hard way with floats and ints for such matters.
    – martin
    Aug 22, 2011 at 17:27
  • And? what should we do with firstDate and secondDate?
    – Gargo
    Oct 23, 2014 at 19:29
  • 3
    NSHourCalendarUnit was changed to NSCalendarUnitHour. Same with mins, days, months. Guess that Apple engineer was on crack that day.
    – GeneCode
    Sep 1, 2016 at 6:15
25

NSDate reference is a great little document: http://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSDate_Class/Reference/Reference.html

- (NSTimeInterval)timeIntervalSinceDate:(NSDate *)anotherDate

is what you are looking for if you want time interval difference.

For days (as not every day has same number of minutes, hours) you want to see Martins answer below and use NSDateComponents with [NSCalendar currentCalendar]

2
  • Every day doesnt have same number of hours??? I thought everyday has 24 hours? Can you explain how is this so?
    – GeneCode
    Sep 1, 2016 at 6:13
  • The earth does not rotate uniformly, some days could be longer than others. Feb 15, 2018 at 17:56
2

Here's a Swift implementation (I use this all the time while debugging things like network requests and JSON parsing):

let date1 = NSDate()

// do some long running task

let date2 = NSDate()
print(date2.timeIntervalSinceDate(date1))

// you can also do this in one line, of course:
print(NSDate().timeIntervalSinceDate(date1))

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