68

What's the best way to trim a DateTime object to a specific precision? For instance, if I have a DateTime with a value of '2008-09-29 09:41:43', but I only want it's precision to be to the minute, is there any better way to do it than this?

private static DateTime TrimDateToMinute(DateTime date)
{
    return new DateTime(
        date.Year, 
        date.Month, 
        date.Day, 
        date.Hour, 
        date.Minute, 
        0);
}

What I would really want is to make it variable so that I could set its precision to the second, minute, hour, or day.

0

5 Answers 5

119
static class Program
{
    //using extension method:
    static DateTime Trim(this DateTime date, long roundTicks)
    {
        return new DateTime(date.Ticks - date.Ticks % roundTicks, date.Kind);
    }

    //sample usage:
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(DateTime.Now);
        Console.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.Trim(TimeSpan.TicksPerDay));
        Console.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.Trim(TimeSpan.TicksPerHour));
        Console.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.Trim(TimeSpan.TicksPerMillisecond));
        Console.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.Trim(TimeSpan.TicksPerMinute));
        Console.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.Trim(TimeSpan.TicksPerSecond));
        Console.ReadLine();
    }

}
4
  • I like this very much and if I was using the 3.5 framework, this is the route I would take, unless there's something better still out there. Unfortunately, I'm using 2.0 so I'll have to stick to your first answer. Thanks! Sep 30, 2008 at 13:48
  • 18
    If you're making it a general-purpose extension method, it's worth preserving the DateTimeKind (Unspecified/Utc/Local): return new DateTime(date.Ticks - date.Ticks % roundTicks, date.Kind);
    – Joe
    Oct 3, 2008 at 11:12
  • ... or a one-liner that also preserves the Kind property: d = d.AddTicks(-(d.Ticks + 30*TimeSpan.TicksPerSecond) % TimeSpan.TicksPerMinute);
    – Joe
    Oct 4, 2008 at 6:55
  • @Joe thanks man, I came here to write the same comment after spending 2 hours debugging expired auth tokens :)) Mar 20, 2020 at 22:05
9

You could use an enumeration

public enum DateTimePrecision
{
  Hour, Minute, Second
}

public static DateTime TrimDate(DateTime date, DateTimePrecision precision)
{
  switch (precision)
  {
    case DateTimePrecision.Hour:
      return new DateTime(date.Year, date.Month, date.Day, date.Hour, 0, 0);
    case DateTimePrecision.Minute:
      return new DateTime(date.Year, date.Month, date.Day, date.Hour, date.Minute, 0);
    case DateTimePrecision.Second:
      return new DateTime(date.Year, date.Month, date.Day, date.Hour, date.Minute, date.Second);
    default:
      break;
  }
}

and expand as required.

4
  • For Hour and Minute, I'm wondering if Minutes and Seconds should be rounded than using 0?
    – Vivek
    Sep 30, 2008 at 13:33
  • 2
    Certainly you could adapt the code to round rather than truncate should you need to; often I find truncation feels more natural as that is effectively how clocks behave.
    – Rikalous
    Sep 30, 2008 at 14:38
  • when you need it only once - return new DateTime(dt.Year, 1, 1) Oct 8, 2018 at 14:08
  • Please remember to preserve the DateTime.Kind. Jun 4, 2021 at 23:02
8

I like this method. Someone mentioned it was good to preserve the Date Kind, etc. This accomplishes that because you dont have to make a new DateTime. The DateTime is properly cloned from the original DateTime and it simply subtracts the remainder ticks.

public static DateTime FloorTime(DateTime dt, TimeSpan interval) 
{
  return dt.AddTicks(-1 * (dt.Ticks % interval.Ticks));
}

usage:

dt = FloorTime(dt, TimeSpan.FromMinutes(5)); // floor to the nearest 5min interval
dt = FloorTime(dt, TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1)); // floor to the nearest second
dt = FloorTime(dt, TimeSpan.FromDays(1));    // floor to the nearest day
2
  • Since DateTime format is a structure (value type), any manipulation will create a new value even though it does not present it that way. stackoverflow.com/a/1859266/955444
    – bkqc
    Jul 9, 2019 at 14:23
  • True, but it is properly cloned by the DateTime code, so the time zone is indeed preserved. I will slightly reword my answer to be more clear. Thank you. Jul 13, 2019 at 18:56
1

There are some good solutions presented here, but when I need to do this, I simply do:

DateTime truncDate;
truncDate = date.Date; // trim to day
truncDate = date.Date + TimeSpan.Parse(string.Format("{0:HH:00:00}", date)); // trim to hour
truncDate = date.Date + TimeSpan.Parse(string.Format("{0:HH:mm}", date)); // trim to minute
truncDate = date.Date + TimeSpan.Parse(string.Format("{0:HH:mm:ss}", date)); // trim to second

Hope it helps.

5
  • doesn't work, returns only the day + 00:00:00
    – Kᴀτᴢ
    Apr 26, 2017 at 11:45
  • @katz: I'm sorry, but I tested this solution when I published my reply and I have just tested it again and it works perfectly fine. Are you sure you're not testing only the first option above (trim to day)? I don't believe that all the TimeSpan.Parse method calls above are returning to you 00:00:00. Are you sure you're using a DIFFERENT variable (other than the variable "date" itself) to receive the results of these operations (as I used "truncDate" in my example)? If you use the "date" variable itself, the first operation above will truncate it to day, compromising all other results below. Apr 26, 2017 at 15:08
  • @katz: Use a DIFFERENT variable (like "truncDate") and don't do ALL the operations above in sequence and THEN print the result. My code was just an example, but EACH operation (each code line) should be used separately, depending on the precision you want (day, hour, minute or second). For instance, try to execute only the LAST line (trim to second) and then print the result. Apr 26, 2017 at 15:12
  • @katz: Sorry, in the "trim to hour" code line, the was an error, and I have just edited the code. It seems the string format "{0:HH}" does not return (as I would expect) the hour component of the date,so I changed it to "{0:HH:00:00}, which works fine. The other code lines are correct. And all the observations I made in the comments above are still valid. Apr 26, 2017 at 15:29
  • Thanks for your support. With the changes everything is working :) +1
    – Kᴀτᴢ
    Apr 27, 2017 at 6:46
-2
DateTime dt = new DateTime()
dt = dt.AddSeconds(-dt.Second)

Above code will trim seconds.

2
  • It will not trim milliseconds and will result in bad dt.
    – Denis
    Jan 3, 2014 at 12:11
  • 1
    Just add .AddMillisceconds() too then. This answer is suprerior to the other ones in my opinion, since it is way less boiler plate. But please correct me.
    – PuerNoctis
    Aug 1, 2019 at 5:54

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