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What format do I use for Date/Time when writing to an XML file using .NET? Do I simply use DateTime.ToString(), or do I have to use a specific format?

5 Answers 5

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I always use the ISO 8601 format (e.g. 2008-10-31T15:07:38.6875000-05:00) -- date.ToString("o"). It is the XSD date format as well. That is the preferred format and a Standard Date and Time Format string, although you can use a manual format string if necessary if you don't want the 'T' between the date and time: date.ToString("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");

EDIT: If you are using a generated class from an XSD or Web Service, you can just assign the DateTime instance directly to the class property. If you are writing XML text, then use the above.

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47

EDIT: This is bad advice. Use "o", as above. "s" does the wrong thing.

I always use this:

dateTime.ToUniversalTime().ToString("s");

This is correct if your schema looks like this:

<xs:element name="startdate" type="xs:dateTime"/>

Which would result in:

<startdate>2002-05-30T09:00:00</startdate>

You can get more information here: http://www.w3schools.com/xml/schema_dtypes_date.asp

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    Keep in mind this converts the date to UTC. When you process the date, you must convert it back to your current timezone based on locale (unless you are processing everything in UTC). Also, usually you would put a 'Z' at the end to denote the date is UTC.
    – Ryan
    Oct 31, 2008 at 20:32
  • "s" works for me when calling a .net web service from soap ui. May 15, 2014 at 11:42
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If you are manually assembling the XML string use var.ToUniversalTime().ToString("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.fffffffZ")); That will output the official XML Date Time format. But you don't have to worry about format if you use the built-in serialization methods.

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  • jonnii's will return basicly the same result.
    – chilltemp
    Oct 31, 2008 at 20:09
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    In this case all dates MUST be in UTC time zone otherwise usage of "Z" suffix is wrong.
    – Fr0sT
    Mar 25, 2013 at 10:29
  • I will repeat the prior comment - this is actually incorrect if the dt is not utc. Aug 14, 2013 at 22:07
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What does the DTD have to say?

If the XML file is for communicating with other existing software (e.g., SOAP), then check that software for what it expects.

If the XML file is for serialisation or communication with non-existing software (e.g., the one you're writing), you can define it. In which case, I'd suggest something that is both easy to parse in your language(s) of choice, and easy to read for humans. e.g., if your language (whether VB.NET or C#.NET or whatever) allows you to parse ISO dates (YYYY-MM-DD) easily, that's the one I'd suggest.

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The XmlConvert class provides these kinds of facilities. About DateTimes, in particular, be careful about obsolete methods. See also: https://stackoverflow.com/a/7457718/1288109

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