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I've spent many hours researching this and am pretty stuck: my question is - has the internal format of a Delphi TDateTime changed between Delphi 7 (released in 2002 or so) and today?

Scenario: I'm reading a binary logfile created by a Delphi 7 app, and the vendor tells me it's a TDateTime in the record, but decoding the bits shows it's clearly not standard IEEE 754 floating point even though the TDateTime produced by modern Delphi is.

But it's some kind of floating point with around 15 bits of exponent and 45 bits of significand (as opposed to 11 and 53 bits in IEE754), and the leading bit is a 1 (which in IEE754 indicates a negative number) for numbers that are clearly not negative, such as the current date/time.

Hints in old documentation suggested that TDateTime "read as" a double but wasn't necessarily represented internally as one, which means that the internal format would be mostly invisible except where these TDateTimes were written out in binary form.

My suspicion is that the change occurred with Delphi 8, which added .NET support, but I simply can't find any references to this anywhere. I have perl code (!) that picks apart these types mostly working, but I'd love to find a formal spec so I can do it properly.

Any old-timers run into this?

~~~ Steve

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    A TDateTime value was stored as a Double value in D7 as well. Date in the integral part (days since 12/30/1899 - thus the double value can be negative). Time part in the fractional part. Dec 16, 2012 at 18:41

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Nothing has changed since Delphi 7. In Delphi 7, and in fact previous versions, TDateTime is IEEE754, measuring the number of days since the Delphi epoch.

You are going to need to get in touch with the software vendor and try to work out what this data's format really is. It would be surprising if the format was a non-IEEE754 floating point data type. Are you quite sure that it is floating point?

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    There was no TDateTime declaration in Turbo Pascal. The DateTime type was a record: DateTime = record Year,Month,Day, Hour,Min, Sec: Word; end;
    – LU RD
    Dec 16, 2012 at 19:06
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    In Delphi 1 a TDateTime was measured from 01.01.0001 while from Delphi 4 on the zero position changed to 31.12.1899.
    – Uwe Raabe
    Dec 16, 2012 at 22:47
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    @UweRaabe, the change was from Delphi 1 to Delphi 2 for better support of OLE 2 automation.
    – LU RD
    Dec 17, 2012 at 0:53
  • @David - I'm almost certain it's some kind of floating point; I've got a set of thousands of data points (8-byte values) where I can muck with the bits and see how the software interprets them. It don't see how it can be anything other than exponent+significand. Dec 18, 2012 at 1:21
  • Ok, i'm an idiot. It's a routine plain vanilla floating point value trivially read by any language: I was just grabbing the wrong bytes. So much time wasted on such a monstrously foolish mistake. Thanks all for helping. Jul 29, 2018 at 22:58
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As for BCB3, BCB6 and D4, it's exactly the IEEE 754 Double-precision floating-point format, in the VCL source file system.pas (as included in BCB6) it's defined by thus:

TDateTime = type Double;

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