54

I have two masked TextBox controls and was wondering how I'd go about getting the time in each one and then converting the difference into milliseconds. Like, say in tb1 I write "12:01" and in tb2 I write "12:02", and then click a button. Once the button's clicked it starts a timer and at 12:02 a messagebox will be displayed. I know how to do all of it except for the time conversion part.

How can it be achieved?

1
  • 1
    Your question is not clear. You don't know how to get difference between two DateTime or how to convert "12:01" to DateTime? Sep 28, 2009 at 14:01

11 Answers 11

132
DateTime dt1 = DateTime.Parse(maskedTextBox1.Text);
DateTime dt2 = DateTime.Parse(maskedTextBox2.Text);
TimeSpan span = dt2 - dt1;
int ms = (int)span.TotalMilliseconds;
17

To answer the title-question:

DateTime d1 = ...;
DateTime d2 = ...;
TimeSpan diff = d2 - d1;

int millisceonds = (int) diff.TotalMilliseconds;

You can use this to set a Timer:

timer1.interval = millisceonds;
timer1.Enabled = true;

Don't forget to disable the timer when handling the tick.

But if you want an event at 12:03, just substitute DateTime.Now for d1.

But it is not clear what the exact function of textBox1 and textBox2 are.

2
  • 1
    You need to use TotalMilliseconds, not Milliseconds. Sep 28, 2009 at 14:11
  • 2
    You need "TotalMilliseconds" not "Milliseconds" Milliseconds will only give you the millisecond "remainder" of the time difference, not the entire time span. 2.475 seconds gives Milliseconds=475, TotalMilliseconds=2475
    – StarPacker
    Sep 28, 2009 at 14:14
8

You have to convert textbox's values to DateTime (t1,t2), then:

DateTime t1,t2;
t1 = DateTime.Parse(textbox1.Text);
t2 = DateTime.Parse(textbox2.Text);
int diff = ((TimeSpan)(t2 - t1)).TotalMilliseconds;

Or use DateTime.TryParse(textbox1, out t1); Error handling is up to you.

1
  • 1
    You were right the first time: you need to use TotalMilliseconds (unless you like returning 0 every time). Sep 28, 2009 at 14:12
5

Many of the above mentioned solutions might suite different people.
I would like to suggest a slightly modified code than most accepted solution by "MusiGenesis".

DateTime firstTime = DateTime.Parse( TextBox1.Text );
DateTime secondTime = DateTime.Parse( TextBox2.Text );
double milDiff = secondTime.Subtract(firstTime).TotalMilliseconds;

Considerations:
- earlierTime.Subtract(laterTime) you will get a negative value.
- use int milDiff = (int)DateTime.Now.Subtract(StartTime).TotalMilliseconds; if you need integer value instead of double
- Same code can be used to get difference between two Date values and you may get .TotalDays or .TotalHours insteaf of .TotalMilliseconds

2

If you are only dealing with Times and no dates you will want to only deal with TimeSpan and handle crossing over midnight.

TimeSpan time1 = ...;  // assume TimeOfDay
TimeSpan time2 = ...;  // assume TimeOfDay
TimeSpan diffTime = time2 - time1;
if (time2 < time1)  // crosses over midnight
    diffTime += TimeSpan.FromTicks(TimeSpan.TicksPerDay);
int totalMilliSeconds = (int)diffTime.TotalMilliseconds;
2
var firstTime = DateTime.Now;
var secondTime = DateTime.Now.AddMilliseconds(600);
var diff = secondTime.Subtract(firstTime).Milliseconds;


// var diff = DateTime.Now.AddMilliseconds(600).Subtract(DateTime.Now).Milliseconds;
1
  • 4
    Please be careful with this answer. Using ´Milliseconds´ instead of ´TotalMilliseconds´ gives different results, the former just gives the milliseconds component of the time span and the latter gives the total time expressed in milliseconds.
    – Tomás Cot
    Aug 12, 2017 at 4:06
0

Try the following:

   DateTime dtStart;
   DateTime dtEnd;

   if (DateTime.TryParse( tb1.Text, out dtStart ) && DateTime.TryParse(tb2.Text, out dtEnd ))
   {
      TimeSpan ts = dtStart - dtEnd;
      double difference = ts.TotalMilliseconds;
   }
0

If you just want to display a message box at 12:02, use a timer control with delay of, say, 250ms, that keeps checking if the current time is 12:02. When it is, display the message and stop the timer. Note this does not require a start time field (although you may be using that for something else -- I don't know -- in which case the other code provided to you here will be helpful).

0

Try:

DateTime first;
DateTime second;

int milliSeconds = (int)((TimeSpan)(second - first)).TotalMilliseconds;
3
  • No need to type-cast to TimeSpan, and TotalMilliseconds is a double. Sep 28, 2009 at 14:09
  • The cast does'n hurt performance and makes the intention clearer. The cast of the return value to int also makes sense, as it has to be casted anyway to use it with the timer, as the OP wants to. By the way, the code is meant as an example, so if there is anything wrong and worth a down vote, please elaborate. Sep 28, 2009 at 14:56
  • There is no cast of the return value. The last line won't compile. Sep 28, 2009 at 15:41
0
    public static Int64 GetDifferencesBetweenTwoDate(DateTime newDate, DateTime oldDate, string type)
    {
        var span = newDate - oldDate;
        switch (type)
        {
            case "tt": return (int)span.Ticks;
            case "ms": return (int)span.TotalMilliseconds;
            case "ss": return (int)span.TotalSeconds;
            case "mm": return (int)span.TotalMinutes;
            case "hh": return (int)span.TotalHours;
            case "dd": return (int)span.TotalDays;
        }
        return 0;
    }
0

VB.net, Desktop application. If you need lapsed time in milliseconds:

Dim starts As Integer = My.Computer.Clock.TickCount
Dim ends As Integer = My.Computer.Clock.TickCount
Dim lapsed As Integer = ends - starts

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