I'm having an impossible time creating a DateTime object that stores the date 02/29/101 (Taiwan Date) in C# without changing the Thread culture.
When I do this:
DateTime date = new DateTime(2012, 2, 29, new TaiwanCalendar());
It creates a DateTime object with a date 1911 years in the future. It seems this overload is meant to tell the DateTime object that you're providing a Taiwan date, not that you want a Taiwan date.
I can do this
DateTime leapDay = new DateTime(2012, 2, 29);
string date = string.Format("{0}/{1}/{2}", new TaiwanCalendar().GetYear(leapDay), new TaiwanCalendar().GetMonth(leapDay), new TaiwanCalendar().GetDayOfMonth(leapDay));
but that's a string representation, and my calling code needs a DateTime object returned and this:
DateTime leapDay = new DateTime(2012, 2, 29);
DateTime date = new DateTime(new TaiwanCalendar().GetYear(leapDay), new TaiwanCalendar().GetMonth(leapDay), new TaiwanCalendar().GetDayOfMonth(leapDay));
doesn't work (I get an error saying "Year, Month, and Day parameters describe an un-representable DateTime.").
I need a DateTime object that can accurately represent a Taiwan date without changing the thread culture. This works:
Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture = CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("zh-TW");
Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture.DateTimeFormat.Calendar = new TaiwanCalendar();
DateTime date = new DateTime(2012, 2, 29);
but as soon as I change the thread culture back to en-US the date changes back automatically which prevents me from returning it as a Taiwan date.
Is there any way to do this, or am I going to have to pass my date around as a string?