6

I have a return JSON in my application in Swift, and have a field that returns me a date. When I refer to this data, the code gives me something like "/ Date (1420420409680) /". How do I convert this into NSDate? In Swift, please, I´ve tested examples with Objective-C, without success.

4
  • 1
    See stackoverflow.com/questions/26844132/…
    – rmaddy
    Jan 12, 2015 at 18:15
  • It's a plain old UNIX timestamp.
    – Hot Licks
    Jan 12, 2015 at 18:21
  • @HotLicks: ... only in milliseconds (or it would be in the year 46981 :)
    – Martin R
    Jan 12, 2015 at 19:48
  • @MartinR - Yeah, you recognize it by the leading "14", and then you have to figure out whether it's seconds, milliseconds, or microseconds by counting the digits. (And in one case I ran into it was even 10s of nanoseconds.)
    – Hot Licks
    Jan 12, 2015 at 20:00

3 Answers 3

10

That looks very similar to the JSON encoding for a date as used by Microsoft's ASP.NET AJAX, which is described in An Introduction to JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) in JavaScript and .NET:

For example, Microsoft's ASP.NET AJAX uses neither of the described conventions. Rather, it encodes .NET DateTime values as a JSON string, where the content of the string is /Date(ticks)/ and where ticks represents milliseconds since epoch (UTC). So November 29, 1989, 4:55:30 AM, in UTC is encoded as "\/Date(628318530718)\/".

The only difference is that you have the format /Date(ticks)/ and not \/Date(ticks)\/.

You have to extract the number between the parentheses. Dividing that by 1000 gives the number in seconds since 1 January 1970.

The following code shows how that could be done. It is implemented as a "failable convenience initializer" for NSDate:

extension NSDate {
    convenience init?(jsonDate: String) {

        let prefix = "/Date("
        let suffix = ")/"
        // Check for correct format:
        if jsonDate.hasPrefix(prefix) && jsonDate.hasSuffix(suffix) {
            // Extract the number as a string:
            let from = jsonDate.startIndex.advancedBy(prefix.characters.count)
            let to = jsonDate.endIndex.advancedBy(-suffix.characters.count)
            // Convert milliseconds to double
            guard let milliSeconds = Double(jsonDate[from ..< to]) else {
                return nil
            }
            // Create NSDate with this UNIX timestamp
            self.init(timeIntervalSince1970: milliSeconds/1000.0)
        } else {
            return nil
        }
    }
}

Example usage (with your date string):

if let theDate = NSDate(jsonDate: "/Date(1420420409680)/") {
    print(theDate)
} else {
    print("wrong format")
}

This gives the output

2015-01-05 01:13:29 +0000

Update for Swift 3 (Xcode 8):

extension Date {
    init?(jsonDate: String) {

        let prefix = "/Date("
        let suffix = ")/"

        // Check for correct format:
        guard jsonDate.hasPrefix(prefix) && jsonDate.hasSuffix(suffix) else { return nil }

        // Extract the number as a string:
        let from = jsonDate.index(jsonDate.startIndex, offsetBy: prefix.characters.count)
        let to = jsonDate.index(jsonDate.endIndex, offsetBy: -suffix.characters.count)

        // Convert milliseconds to double
        guard let milliSeconds = Double(jsonDate[from ..< to]) else { return nil }

        // Create NSDate with this UNIX timestamp
        self.init(timeIntervalSince1970: milliSeconds/1000.0)
    }
}

Example:

if let theDate = Date(jsonDate: "/Date(1420420409680)/") {
    print(theDate)
} else {
    print("wrong format")
}
2
  • @Martin this extension fails for a value like: "/Date(1479119050805+0300)/" because the Double init method of milliseconds cannot return a double for the value of 1479119050805+0300 due to the plus sign, if you manage to handle this case please share your code here
    – JAHelia
    Nov 14, 2016 at 10:32
  • 1
    @JAHelia: Have a look at stackoverflow.com/a/33166980/1187415 for a newer version which reads JSON dates with or without timezone offset.
    – Martin R
    Nov 14, 2016 at 10:36
2

Adding onto what the others have provided, simply create utility method in your class below:

  func dateFromStringConverter(date: String)-> NSDate? {
    //Create Date Formatter
    let dateFormatter = NSDateFormatter()
    //Specify Format of String to Parse
    dateFormatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ" //or you can use "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssX"
    //Parse into NSDate
    let dateFromString : NSDate = dateFormatter.dateFromString(date)!

    return dateFromString
}

Then you can call this method in your successfully returned, parsed JSON object, like below:

//Parse the date
 guard let datePhotoWasTaken = itemDictionary["date_taken"] as? String else {return}
     YourClassModel.dateTakenProperty = self.dateFromStringConverter(datePhotoWasTaken)

Or you can ignore the utility method and the caller code above entirely and simply do this:

//Parse the date
 guard let datePhotoWasTaken = itemDictionary["date_taken"] as? NSString else {return}
     YourClassModel.dateTakenProperty = NSDate(timeIntervalSince1970: datePhotoWasTaken.doubleValue)

And that should work!

1
  • 1
    The question is about parsing a string like "/Date(1420420409680)/"
    – Martin R
    Feb 9, 2018 at 7:49
0

It looks like an UNIX Timestamp: 01/12/2015 @ 6:14pm (UTC) [According to http://www.unixtimestamp.com/index.php ]

You can convert it to an NSDate object using the constructor NSDate(timeIntervalSince1970: unixTimestamp)

1
  • And how I get timespan of this variable? Jan 12, 2015 at 18:43

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