I saw that in dart there is a class Duration but it cant be used add/subtract years or month. How did you managed this issue, I need to subtract 6 months from an date. Is there something like moment.js for dart or something around? Thank you
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I had a usefull comment below, but I will add it here: var newDate = new DateTime(date.year, date.month - 1, date.day); - if the current day is the last day off the month then wherever you go using months, you should land in the last day of the month (in cases like: when you go from 31.08 to 30.05, from 30.05 you go to 30.03 and not to 31.03) -– cosinusMar 30 at 9:12
12 Answers
Okay so you can do that in two steps, taken from @zoechi (a big contributor to Flutter):
Define the base time, let us say:
var date = DateTime(2018, 1, 13);
Now, you want the new date:
var newDate = DateTime(date.year, date.month - 1, date.day);
And you will get
2017-12-13
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16It works but the problem is in momentjs/c# if you substract 6 months from 2000-08-31 you get 2000-02-29 and with dart you get 2000-03-02, which not so nice at all.– cosinusFeb 20, 2019 at 21:36
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3Date arithmetic is hard, and definitions vary between implementations. Even time is odd... what happens when you add "1 day" that crosses the DST boundary? Good luck on getting something that works the way you want. :) Feb 20, 2019 at 23:53
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Yes you are right, what I did in summary(the story is longer :) with more conditions) is if the current day is the last day off the month then wherever you go using months you land in the last day of the month (in cases of situations when you go from 31.08 to 30.05, from 30.05 you go to 30.03 and not to 31.03)– cosinusFeb 21, 2019 at 12:14
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2@polRk so
new DateTime(date.year, date.month - 50, date.day)
does not work?– SmilyApr 17, 2021 at 9:07 -
1@Smily it works fine in my country since we use negative month value Sep 11, 2022 at 19:50
You can use the subtract
and add
methods
date1.subtract(Duration(days: 7, hours: 3, minutes: 43, seconds: 56));
date1.add(Duration(days: 1, hours: 23)));
Flutter Docs:
UPDATE
Above is the way to manually manipulate the date, to use years/months as parameters you can use Jiffy plugin, after install:
import 'package:jiffy/jiffy.dart';
DateTime d = Jiffy().subtract(months: 6).dateTime; // 6 months from DateTime.now()
DateTime d = Jiffy().add(months: 6).dateTime;
DateTime d = Jiffy(DateTime date).add(years: 6).dateTime; // Ahead of a specific date given to Jifffy()
DateTime d = Jiffy(DateTime date).subtract(months: 6, years 3).dateTime;
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I wanted to go from a monday to the previous monday and used this approach (
date.subtract(Duration(days: 7));
). However this approaches takes daylight saving times in consideration and the results you get may be off by one hour. Jun 1, 2020 at 18:06 -
43This shouldn't be the answer because it doesn't solve the OP's problem that Duration doesn't take months or years as parameters. But it'll work fine for days, hours, minutes and/or seconds as you say :) Jun 19, 2020 at 16:23
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var myDate = DateTime.parse("2019-09-04 20:18:04Z"); myDate.add(Duration(days: 10)); print("myDate: $myDate");
it is printingmyDate: 2019-09-04 20:18:04.000Z
which is not correct solution.– KamleshAug 11, 2021 at 6:29 -
The question was about adding months/years. And
Duration
doesn't have such properties at all!– RomanOct 13, 2021 at 10:49 -
Try out this package, Jiffy. Adds and subtracts date time. It follows the simple syntax of momentjs
You can add and subtract using the following units
years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds and microseconds
To add 6 months
DateTime d = Jiffy.now().add(months: 6).dateTime; // 2020-04-26 10:05:57.469367
// You can also add you own Datetime object
DateTime d = Jiffy.parseFromDateTime(DateTime(2018, 1, 13)).add(months: 6).dateTime; // 2018-07-13 00:00:00.000
Another example
var jiffy = Jiffy.now().add(months: 5, years: 1);
DateTime d = jiffy.dateTime; // 2021-03-26 10:07:10.316874
// you can also format with ease
String s = jiffy.format("yyyy, MMM"); // 2021, Mar
// or default formats
String s = jiffy.yMMMMEEEEdjm; // Friday, March 26, 2021 10:08 AM
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2interesting package. Would be even better if it was all based on extension methods– JonathanJun 17, 2020 at 18:41
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Any time you recommend a piece of code you published or contributed to, it should be mentioned. (just for future reference)– T1960CTMar 18, 2022 at 1:28
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I was facing some problem casting from Jiffy to DateTime. This ans helped me a lot. Thanks a lot for the contribution, DateTime d = Jiffy(DateTime(2018, 1, 13)).add(months: 6).dateTime; last dateTime saved my time. Oct 10, 2022 at 7:36
You can use subtract
and add
methods
But you have to reassign the result to the variable, which means:
This wouldn't work
date1.add(Duration(days: 1, hours: 23)));
But this will:
date1 = date1.add(Duration(days: 1, hours: 23)));
For example:
void main() {
var d = DateTime.utc(2020, 05, 27, 0, 0, 0);
d.add(Duration(days: 1, hours: 23));
// the prev line has no effect on the value of d
print(d); // prints: 2020-05-27 00:00:00.000Z
//But
d = d.add(Duration(days: 1, hours: 23));
print(d); // prints: 2020-05-28 23:00:00.000Z
}
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DateTime createdAt = Timestamp.now().toDate(); createdAt.subtract(Duration(days: 7)); print("createdAt: $createdAt");
Not worked for me. Printing current timestamp, not seven 7 days earlier datetime . Kindly suggest. Thanks.– KamleshAug 11, 2021 at 6:36
In simple way without using any lib you can add Month and Year
var date = new DateTime(2021, 1, 29);
Adding Month :-
date = DateTime(date.year, date.month + 1, date.day);
Adding Year :-
date = DateTime(date.year + 1, date.month, date.day);
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DateTime createdAt = Timestamp.now().toDate(); createdAt.subtract(Duration(days: 7)); print("createdAt: $createdAt");
Not worked for me. Printing current timestamp, not seven 7 days earlier datetime . Kindly suggest. Thanks.– KamleshAug 11, 2021 at 6:37
Not so simple.
final date = DateTime(2017, 1, 1);
final today = date.add(const Duration(days: 1451));
This results in 2020-12-21 23:00:00.000
because Dart considers daylight to calculate dates (so my 1451 days is missing 1 hour, and this is VERY dangerous (for example: Brazil abolished daylight savings in 2019, but if the app was written before that, the result will be forever wrong, same goes if the daylight savings is reintroduced in the future)).
To ignore the dayligh calculations, do this:
final date = DateTime(2017, 1, 1);
final today = DateTime(date.year, date.month, date.day + 1451);
Yep. Day is 1451 and this is OK. The today
variable now shows the correct date and time: 2020-12-12 00:00:00.000
.
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You can use e.g.
DateTime.utc(2017, 1, 1)
to solve this if you are working with UTC. I had the same issue. Jun 27 at 10:32
It's pretty straightforward.
Simply add or subtract with numbers on DateTime parameters based on your requirements.
For example -
~ Here I had a requirement of getting the date-time exactly 16 years before today even with milliseconds and in the below way I got my solution.
DateTime today = DateTime.now();
debugPrint("Today's date is: $today"); //Today's date is: 2022-03-17 09:08:33.891843
After desired subtraction;
DateTime desiredDate = DateTime(
today.year - 16,
today.month,
today.day,
today.hour,
today.minute,
today.second,
today.millisecond,
today.microsecond,
);
debugPrint("16 years ago date is: $desiredDate"); // 16 years before date is: 2006-03-17 09:08:33.891843
Increase and Decrease of the day/month/year can be done by DateTime class
Initialise DateFormat which needed to be shown
var _inputFormat = DateFormat('EE, d MMM yyyy');
var _selectedDate = DateTime.now();
Increase Day/month/year:
_selectedDate = DateTime(_selectedDate.year,
_selectedDate.month + 1, _selectedDate.day);
Increase Day/month/year:
_selectedDate = DateTime(_selectedDate.year,
_selectedDate.month - 1, _selectedDate.day);
Above example is for only month, similar way we can increase or decrease year and day.
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DateTime createdAt = Timestamp.now().toDate(); createdAt.subtract(Duration(days: 7)); print("createdAt: $createdAt");
Not worked for me. Printing current timestamp, not seven 7 days earlier datetime . Kindly suggest. Thanks.– KamleshAug 11, 2021 at 6:37 -
@Kamlesh "subtract" does not change the DateTime, it returns a new DateTime instead. So you have to change your code to
createdAt = createdAt.subtract(Duration(days: 7));
. Sep 22, 2021 at 7:19 -
1This doesn't work when
_selectedDate
is March 30 and you subtract 1 month because February is 28 days.– AriNov 29, 2022 at 16:19
I'm a fan of using extensions in dart, and we can use them here like this:
extension DateHelpers on DateTime {
DateTime copyWith({
int? year,
int? month,
int? day,
int? hour,
int? second,
int? millisecond,
int? microsecond,
}) {
return DateTime(
year ?? this.year,
month ?? this.month,
day ?? this.day,
hour ?? this.hour,
second ?? this.second,
millisecond ?? this.millisecond,
microsecond ?? this.microsecond,
);
}
DateTime addYears(int years) {
return copyWith(year: this.year + years);
}
DateTime addMonths(int months) {
return copyWith(month: this.month + months);
}
DateTime addWeeks(int weeks) {
return copyWith(day: this.day + weeks*7);
}
DateTime addDays(int days) {
return copyWith(day: this.day + days);
}
}
You can then use this utility code as follows:
final now = DateTime.now();
final tomorrow = now.addDays(1);
final nextWeek = now.addWeeks(1);
final nextMonth = now.addMonths(1);
final nextYear = now.addYears(1);
Can subtract any count of months.
DateTime subtractMonths(int count) {
var y = count ~/ 12;
var m = count - y * 12;
if (m > month) {
y += 1;
m = month - m;
}
return DateTime(year - y, month - m, day);
}
Also works
DateTime(date.year, date.month + (-120), date.day);
Future<void> main() async {
final DateTime now = DateTime.now();
var kdate = KDate.buildWith(now);
log("YEAR", kdate.year);
log("MONTH", kdate.month);
log("DATE", kdate.date);
log("Last Year", kdate.lastYear);
log("Last Month", kdate.lastMonth);
log("Yesturday", kdate.yesturday);
log("Last Week Date", kdate.lastWeekDate);
}
void log(title, data) {
print("\n$title ====> $data");
}
class KDate {
KDate({
this.now,
required this.year,
required this.month,
required this.date,
required this.lastYear,
required this.lastMonth,
required this.yesturday,
required this.lastWeekDate,
});
final DateTime? now;
final String? year;
final String? month;
final String? date;
final String? lastMonth;
final String? lastYear;
final String? yesturday;
final String? lastWeekDate;
factory KDate.buildWith(DateTime now) => KDate(
now: now,
year: (now.year).toString().split(" ")[0],
month: (now.month).toString().split(" ")[0],
date: (now.day).toString().split(" ")[0],
lastYear: (now.year - 1).toString().split(" ")[0],
lastMonth: DateTime(now.year, now.month, now.month)
.subtract(Duration(days: 28))
.toString()
.split(" ")[0]
.toString()
.split("-")[1],
yesturday: DateTime(now.year, now.month, now.day)
.subtract(Duration(days: 1))
.toString()
.split(" ")[0]
.toString()
.split("-")
.last,
lastWeekDate: DateTime(now.year, now.month, now.day)
.subtract(Duration(days: 7))
.toString()
.split(" ")[0]
.toString()
.split("-")
.last,
);
}
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1While this code may answer the question, providing additional context regarding how and/or why it solves the problem would improve the answer's long-term value. Jun 20, 2021 at 16:02
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This doesn't work when
now
is March 30 and you subtract 1 month because February is 28 days.– AriNov 29, 2022 at 16:23
As to Month, this may help.
extension DateTimeExtension on DateTime {
DateTime addMonth(int month) {
final expectedMonth = (this.month + month) % 12;
DateTime result = DateTime(year, this.month + month, day, hour, minute, second, millisecond, microsecond);
final isOverflow = expectedMonth < result.month;
if (isOverflow) {
return DateTime(result.year, result.month, 1, result.hour, result.minute, result.second, result.millisecond, result.microsecond)
.add(const Duration(days: -1));
} else {
return result;
}
}
}
Test Code:
import 'package:flutter_test/flutter_test.dart';
import 'package:my_app/shared/date_time_extension.dart';
void main() {
test('addMonth()', () {
final dateTime = DateTime(2023, 3, 31, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0);
expect(dateTime.addMonth(2), DateTime(2023, 5, 31, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0));
expect(dateTime.addMonth(11), DateTime(2024, 2, 29, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0));
expect(dateTime.addMonth(-1), DateTime(2023, 2, 28, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0));
expect(dateTime.addMonth(-2), DateTime(2023, 1, 31, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0));
});
}