The examples mentioned above represent only half picture of the solution because most of the solution only take date value (e.g: 2010-11-01) into account when calculating the difference however in-real world scenario NSDate instance always come together with time and impact the difference on the result as well.
Now, let's talk about the accepted solution where user defined the two dates but not time for them.
NSString *start = @"2010-09-01";
NSString *end = @"2010-09-02";
NSDateFormatter *f = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
[f setDateFormat:@"yyyy-MM-dd"];
NSDate *startDate = [f dateFromString:start];
NSDate *endDate = [f dateFromString:end];
Here the time for both dates would be same because no time has been provided for them which means it doesn't impact on the difference calculation.
startDate "2010-09-01 12:00 AM"
endDate "2010-09-02 12:00 AM"
And the result would be days = 1
Now let's add a specific time for both dates:
startDate "2010-09-01 02:00 PM"
endDate "2010-09-02 02:00 AM"
After adding a specific time the result would change. Now days = 0 even though day defined in the dates are different. It's because the time difference between the two dates is less than 24 hours.
This calculation method is gonna work fine as long as:
- Desired result is based on time difference.
Or
- Time is not defined for difference.
However, if you wanna calculate the days difference based on calendar date change then there would a problem because in the above example even though calendar date changed but the result would be days = 0. It's because of the time difference is less than 24 hours.
So, how we can calculate the days difference based on calendar date change. Here is the Apple suggested way of doing it:
@implementation NSCalendar (MySpecialCalculations)
- (NSInteger)daysWithinEraFromDate:(NSDate *)startDate toDate:(NSDate *)endDate {
NSInteger startDay=[self ordinalityOfUnit:NSDayCalendarUnit inUnit: NSEraCalendarUnit forDate:startDate];
NSInteger endDay=[self ordinalityOfUnit:NSDayCalendarUnit inUnit: NSEraCalendarUnit forDate:endDate];
return endDay - startDay;
}
@end
More details are available here
My two cent on the topic to represent the remaining half of the picture.