If I have an NSTimeInterval that is set to say 200.0, is there a way to convert that into 00:03:20, I was thinking I could initialise an NSDate with it and then use NSDateFormatter using HH:mm:ss. My question is, is there a quick way to do this or do I have to break up the number myself and use [NSString stringWithFormat: %02d:%02d:%02d, myHour, myMin, mySec]
?
12 Answers
No need to use NSDateFormatter
or anything else than division and modulo. NSTimeInterval
is just a double containing seconds.
Swift
func stringFromTimeInterval(interval: NSTimeInterval) -> String {
let interval = Int(interval)
let seconds = interval % 60
let minutes = (interval / 60) % 60
let hours = (interval / 3600)
return String(format: "%02d:%02d:%02d", hours, minutes, seconds)
}
Objective-C
- (NSString *)stringFromTimeInterval:(NSTimeInterval)interval {
NSInteger ti = (NSInteger)interval;
NSInteger seconds = ti % 60;
NSInteger minutes = (ti / 60) % 60;
NSInteger hours = (ti / 3600);
return [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%02ld:%02ld:%02ld", (long)hours, (long)minutes, (long)seconds];
}
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Much appreciated, thats what I was thinking but I just wanted to check that I was not missing something already included as part of the iOS SDK. Commented Feb 8, 2011 at 13:11
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1I want to point out that ":" works as a delimiter only in English and some other languages. Finnish, for example, uses "." - like this "15.02.59"– sgoshaCommented Aug 5, 2014 at 20:09
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@sgosha, exactly, normally Apple tends to provide formatters for these. Should I instead use a localized string for formatting? Commented Aug 21, 2014 at 16:23
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23this is the wrong answer since it doesn't localize the delimiter (as other comments mention). using NSDateCompomentsFormatter you can correctly format your time interval in a single line, e.g.
NSDateComponentsFormatter().stringFromTimeInterval(NSTimeInterval(duration))
in swift Commented Jun 3, 2015 at 18:06 -
4For localization and future proofing, the correct solution is to use NSDateComponentsFormatter as described by @jrc– voidrefCommented Jul 2, 2015 at 0:52
On iOS 8, use NSDateComponentsFormatter
.
NSDateComponentsFormatter *dateComponentsFormatter = [[NSDateComponentsFormatter alloc] init];
NSLog(@"%@", [dateComponentsFormatter stringFromTimeInterval:200.0]);
outputs "3:20".
NSDateComponentsFormatter *dateComponentsFormatter = [[NSDateComponentsFormatter alloc] init];
dateComponentsFormatter.zeroFormattingBehavior = NSDateComponentsFormatterZeroFormattingBehaviorPad;
dateComponentsFormatter.allowedUnits = (NSCalendarUnitHour | NSCalendarUnitMinute | NSCalendarUnitSecond);
NSLog(@"%@", [dateComponentsFormatter stringFromTimeInterval:200.0]);
outputs "0:03:20".
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2Nice update. But if it's really just such a simple calculation, wouldn't be using these object a huge overhead (as long as there is no dynamic format involved)? Commented Aug 28, 2015 at 17:08
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2you need the formatting to ensure the string appears correctly for different locales etc. Commented Apr 14, 2016 at 10:20
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Really tiny comment, but it is weird to give an example of C function for ObjectiveC question. Probably worth changing it into ObjectiveC format? Commented May 24, 2016 at 6:56
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Swift 3 version of onmyway133's answer:
import Foundation
func format(_ duration: TimeInterval) -> String {
let formatter = DateComponentsFormatter()
formatter.zeroFormattingBehavior = .pad
formatter.allowedUnits = [.minute, .second]
if duration >= 3600 {
formatter.allowedUnits.insert(.hour)
}
return formatter.string(from: duration)!
}
print(format(12)) // 0:12
print(format(65)) // 1:05
print(format(1750)) // 29:10
print(format(3890)) // 1:04:50
print(format(45720)) // 12:42:00
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Is creating a DateComponentsFormatter expensive performancewise, like a DateFormatter or NumberFormatter?– MosheCommented Sep 15, 2017 at 22:07
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1Instead of checking if there's an hour value, setting
zeroFormattingBehavior
to be[.dropLeading, .pad]
might be a better (less code) option. Commented Oct 28, 2018 at 23:47 -
The comments appear to be incorrect. This code results in: 00:12, 01:05, 29:10, 01:04:50, 12:42:00– Jordan HCommented Jul 3, 2020 at 20:47
Some extra lines of code, but I feel using NSDateComponents will give a more precise value.
- (NSString *)getTimeRepresentationFromDate:(NSDate *)iDate withTimeInterval:(NSTimeInterval)iTimeInterval {
NSString *aReturnValue = nil;
NSDate *aNewDate = [iDate dateByAddingTimeInterval:iTimeInterval];
unsigned int theUnits = NSHourCalendarUnit | NSMinuteCalendarUnit | NSSecondCalendarUnit;
NSCalendar *aCalender = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSDateComponents *aDateComponents = [aCalender components:theUnits fromDate:iDate toDate:aNewDate options:0];
aReturnValue = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%d:%d:%d", [aDateComponents hour], [aDateComponents minute], [aDateComponents second]];
return aReturnValue;
}
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The above method uses the 2 dates using which the TimeInterval is created. You can also pass [NSDate date] to iDate parameter as a default value.– RoshitCommented Nov 13, 2011 at 10:30
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2In what way is this "more precise" than the method used by @matthias-bauch?– j bCommented Jul 1, 2013 at 16:59
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1with this method u get time interval in seconds, hours , min i.e. in terms of 60 while @matthias-bauch's answer gives you in decimal terms for example if you wait for sufficient time you will see 1 min 79 sec instead of 2 min 19 sec– Ashish PCommented Jan 28, 2014 at 8:38
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This is a much better solution than the accepted solution. The use of ":" is still a problem for internationalization, but at least this is robust across leap days and daylight savings boundaries. Commented Aug 26, 2014 at 18:30
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@AshishPisey The modulo operator prevents anything bigger than 59. Commented Oct 4, 2014 at 14:11
In Swift 2, iOS 8+. This makes sure we only show hour when necessary
func format(duration: NSTimeInterval) -> String {
let formatter = NSDateComponentsFormatter()
formatter.zeroFormattingBehavior = .Pad
if duration >= 3600 {
formatter.allowedUnits = [.Hour, .Minute, .Second]
} else {
formatter.allowedUnits = [.Minute, .Second]
}
return formatter.stringFromTimeInterval(duration) ?? ""
}
So you have
print(format(12)) // 0:12
print(format(65)) // 1:05
print(format(1750)) // 29:10
print(format(3890)) // 1:04:50
print(format(45720)) // 12:42:00
Swift 4
DateComponentsFormatter().string(from: <# TimeInterval #>)
ex:
DateComponentsFormatter().string(from: 59.0)
NSTimeInterval ti = 3667;
double hours = floor(ti / 60 / 60);
double minutes = floor((ti - (hours * 60 * 60)) / 60);
double seconds = floor(ti - (hours * 60 * 60) - (minutes * 60));
To "extend" Matthias Bauch's suggestion, in Swift I would make this a computed property of NSTimeInterval:
extension NSTimeInterval {
var stringValue: String {
let interval = Int(self)
let seconds = interval % 60
let minutes = (interval / 60) % 60
let hours = (interval / 3600)
return String(format: "%02d:%02d:%02d", hours, minutes, seconds)
}
}
The advantage of this is it's attached to the NSTimeInterval
type, not your view controller or wherever else you put that function. To use you'd go something like:
let timeInterval = NSDate().timeIntervalSinceDate(start)
self.elapsedTimeLabel.text = timeInterval.stringValue
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Thanks, Kenny! In my case I needed them separately, so I added additional variables to your extension: "var seconds: Int { let interval = Int(self); let seconds = interval % 60; return seconds }" and so on for minutes and hours. So that usage will be: print("minutes spent: (timeInterval.minutes)")– VitaliiCommented Aug 19, 2016 at 13:07
Based on answer by @onmyway133 here is the Swift 4 version:
func format(duration: TimeInterval) -> String {
let formatter = DateComponentsFormatter()
formatter.zeroFormattingBehavior = .pad
if duration >= 3600 {
formatter.allowedUnits = [.hour, .minute, .second];
} else {
formatter.allowedUnits = [.minute, .second];
}
return formatter.string(from: duration) ?? "";
}
straight from apple docs: in h file:
@property(strong,nonatomic)NSDateComponentsFormatter *timerFormatter;
in m file
@synthesize timerFormatter;
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
NSDateComponentsFormatter *timerFormatter = [[NSDateComponentsFormatter alloc] init];
timerFormatter.unitsStyle = NSDateComponentsFormatterUnitsStylePositional;
//10:59 Positional THIS ONE DOES NOT SEEM TO WORK iOS<9 WHEN <1Minute JUST SHOWS 01, 10m 59s Abbreviated, 10min 59sec Short, 10minutes 59seconds Full ...
timerFormatter.allowedUnits = NSCalendarUnitHour|NSCalendarUnitMinute|NSCalendarUnitSecond;
}
whereever you need to convert your NSTimeInterval timeInterval to hh:mm:ss string, do this:
NSString *txt=[timerFormatter stringFromTimeInterval:timeInterval];
I guess, the timer fraction should be ceiled out. As Matthias' code was creating that issue in seconds, I use the following slightly modified from that of Matthias
- (NSString *)stringFromTimeInterval:(NSTimeInterval)interval {
int ti = (int) ceil(interval);
int seconds = ti % 60;
int minutes = (ti / 60) % 60;
int hours = (ti / 3600);
return [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%02d:%02d:%02d",hours, minutes, seconds];
}
Objective C version of onmyway133's answer
- (NSString*) formatTimeInterval:(NSTimeInterval) timeInterval {
NSDateComponentsFormatter *formatter = [[NSDateComponentsFormatter alloc] init];
formatter.zeroFormattingBehavior = NSDateComponentsFormatterZeroFormattingBehaviorPad;
if (timeInterval > 3600) {
formatter.allowedUnits = NSCalendarUnitHour | NSCalendarUnitMinute | NSCalendarUnitSecond;
} else {
formatter.allowedUnits = NSCalendarUnitMinute | NSCalendarUnitSecond;
}
return [formatter stringFromTimeInterval:timeInterval];
}