130

Is there a better .net way to check if a DateTime has occured 'today' then the code below?

if ( newsStory.WhenAdded.Day == DateTime.Now.Day &&
     newsStory.WhenAdded.Month == DateTime.Now.Month &&
     newsStory.WhenAdded.Year == DateTime.Now.Year )
{ 
    // Story happened today
}
else
{ 
    // Story didn't happen today
}
1
  • 15
    You may compare newStory.Date == DateTime.Now.Date
    – Guillaume
    Oct 21, 2009 at 15:27

12 Answers 12

258
if (newsStory.WhenAdded.Date == DateTime.Today)
{

}
else
{

}

Should do the trick.

15
  • 4
    ...if newsStory.Date is actually only the date portion, without time. ;)
    – Lucero
    Oct 21, 2009 at 15:30
  • 14
    ...which it is, if newsStory is a DateTime Oct 21, 2009 at 15:31
  • 20
    well, DateTime is a part of the .NET Framework Class Library, so while it's possible that the OP created his own class that happens to share the same name, you'd have to wonder why he would ask StackOverflow how to use a custom class he created and expect us to magically know how it worked. ;) Oct 21, 2009 at 16:04
  • 2
    @Lucero that's possible however the question title reads 'two DateTimes'. ;) I guess that's where we got that missing type from. Oct 23, 2009 at 8:10
  • 1
    @HansPetterNaumann that's logical :) DateTime.AddHours() returns a new DateTime object, thus effectively cancelling your .Today operation which indeed didn't have a time component. Dec 12, 2013 at 15:22
31
if( newsStory.Date == DateTime.Today )
{
    // happened today
}
1
  • 6
    I would like to add, it is a very common (and hard to spot bug) - just comparing the DateTime to a DateTime.Today.
    – JL.
    Nov 7, 2011 at 23:20
19

Try

if (newsStory.Date == DateTime.Now.Date) 
{ /* Story happened today */ }
else
{ /* Story didn't happen today */ }
0
14

My solution:

private bool IsTheSameDay(DateTime date1, DateTime date2)
{
    return (date1.Year == date2.Year && date1.DayOfYear == date2.DayOfYear);
}
8

If NewsStory was using a DateTime also, just compare the Date property, and you're done.

However, this depends what "today" actually means. If something is posted shortly before midnight, it will be "old" after a short time. So maybe it would be best to keep the exact story date (including time, preferably UTC) and check if less than 24 hours (or whatever) have passed, which is simple (dates can be subtracted, which gives you a TimeSpan with a TotalHours or TotalDays property).

0
8

You can implement a DateTime extension method.

Create new class for your extension methods:

namespace ExtensionMethods
{
    public static class ExtensionMethods
    {
        public static bool IsSameDay( this DateTime datetime1, DateTime datetime2 )
        {
            return datetime1.Year == datetime2.Year 
                && datetime1.Month == datetime2.Month 
                && datetime1.Day == datetime2.Day;
        }
    }
}

And now, everywhere on your code, where do you want to perform this test, you should include the using:

using ExtensionMethods;

And then, use the extension method:

newsStory.WhenAdded.IsSameDay(DateTime.Now);
2
  • 3
    why not just return datetime1.Date == datetime2.Date ? Nov 12, 2013 at 12:57
  • @SergiuMindras is right, it's enough comparing both Date's since it's TimeSpan will always be 00:00:00.
    – GoRoS
    Jan 29, 2014 at 14:57
7

FYI,

newsStory.Date == DateTime.Today

will return the same compare result as coding

newsStory == DateTime.Today

where newsStory is a DateTime object

.NET is smart enough to determine you want to compare based on Date only and uses that for the internal Compare. Not sure why, and actually having trouble finding documentation for this behaviour.

0
7

As Guillame suggested in a comment, compare values of Date properties:

newStory.Date == DateTime.Now.Date
2

Try this:

newsStory.Date == DateTime.Today
1

well, DateTime has a "Date" property and you could just compare based on that. But looking at the docs it seems that getting that property actually instantiates a new datetime with the time component set to midnight, so it may very well be slower than accessing each individual component, although much cleaner and more readable.

2
  • I think a slowdown(if if exists) will be so small it doesn't matter in almost all cases. Certainly a case of premature optimization. Oct 22, 2009 at 21:06
  • Agreed - these days I find it's increasingly difficult to shake out premature optimization as the modern coding world is more about readability and maintainability. Old habits die hard! Oct 23, 2009 at 9:09
-2

How about

if (newsStory.DayOfYear == DateTime.Now.DayOfYear)
{ // Story happened today
}

But this will also return true for 1st January 2008 and 1st January 2009, which may or may not be what you want.

-6

you could use DateTime.Now.DayOfYear

 if (newsStory.DayOfYear == DateTime.Now.DayOfYear)
 { // story happened today

 }
 else
 { // story didn't happen today

 }
2
  • 1
    I don't think this will work. If today is 10/21/2009, and newsStory is 10/21/2008 - it will return true (I didn't take leap years into account here). Oct 21, 2009 at 15:33
  • 2
    This won't discriminate between years new DateTime(2009, 10, 01).DayOfYear == new DateTime(1900, 10, 01).DayOfYear;
    – Dave D
    Oct 21, 2009 at 15:34

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