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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?

2 Answers 2

7

DateTime values are always in the Gregorian calendar, basically. (Either that, or you can think of them as always being "neutral", but the properties interpret the value as if it's in the Gregorian calendar.) There's no such thing as "A DateTime in a Taiwan calendar" - you use the TaiwanCalendar to interpret a DateTime in a particular way.

If you need to format the DateTime using a particular calendar, you can create the appropriate CultureInfo and pass that to the ToString method. For example:

using System;
using System.Globalization;

class Test
{
    static void Main()        
    {
        var calendar = new TaiwanCalendar();
        var date = new DateTime(101, 2, 29, calendar);
        var culture = CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("zh-TW");
        culture.DateTimeFormat.Calendar = calendar;       

        Console.WriteLine(date.Year); // 2012
        Console.WriteLine(date.ToString(culture)); // 101/2/29 [etc]
        Console.WriteLine(date.ToString("d", culture)); // 101/2/29
    }
}

EDIT: As noted by xanatos, you might also want to consider Calendar.ToDateTime. (I'd love to say think about using Noda Time instead, but we don't support this calendar yet. When we do...)

3
  • The only thing to add is that you can write calendar.ToDateTime(101, 2, 29, 0, 0, 0, 0) (and there is another overload where you can specify the era)
    – xanatos
    Mar 13, 2012 at 15:50
  • That's too bad, I would really like to be able to store any valid Taiwan date into a DateTime object without having to change my Culture. Sounds like that isn't possible (the only day I know would have a problem being leap day). Thanks for the info.
    – omatase
    Mar 13, 2012 at 16:59
  • @omatase: No, you can store it in a DateTime - it's just that it doesn't "know" that it's a Taiwanese date, and you need to provide the culture for formatting purposes... but it's only for formatting purposes that it matters, right? For any calculations, you'd just use the calendar object directly.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 13, 2012 at 18:00
1
 var timeToConvert = DateTime.Now;  //whereever you're getting the time from
 var est = TimeZoneInfo.FindSystemTimeZoneById("Taipei Standard Time");
 return TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(timeToConvert, est).ToString("MM-dd-yyyy");

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