605

I need to remove time portion of date time or probably have the date in following format in object form not in the form of string.

06/26/2009 00:00:00:000

I can not use any string conversion methods as I need the date in object form.

I tried first converting the DateTime to a string, remove the time specific date from it, but it adds 12:00:00 AM as soon as I convert it back to DateTime object back again.

6
  • 11
    There is no date-only class/structure in C#. If you want to have one, you have to add your own class/structure.
    – oleschri
    May 25, 2011 at 9:12
  • 23
    Simply use DateTime.Now.ToShortDateString() Sep 5, 2016 at 22:30
  • 1
    @ShahnawazAalam i believe it's still a string, i got trouble with datetime too. need only date from datetime variable
    – user6516744
    Sep 6, 2016 at 7:24
  • 4
    var dateTime = DateTime.Now.Date;
    – PrathapG
    Oct 4, 2018 at 3:42
  • 2
    @oleschri .NET 6 added the DateOnly and TimeOnly structs. Nov 21, 2022 at 10:34

41 Answers 41

1046

Use the Date property:

var dateAndTime = DateTime.Now;
var date = dateAndTime.Date;

The date variable will contain the date, the time part will be 00:00:00.

10
  • 47
    Wouldn't the time part be 12:00:00 AM as mentioned by the questioner?
    – FIre Panda
    May 25, 2011 at 8:05
  • 17
    The time part is zero (midnight). When this is formatted as a string using the AM/PM format, this is represented as 12 AM.
    – driis
    May 25, 2011 at 8:10
  • 120
    This does not answer the question. As the answer suggests, DateTime.Date (which is a DateTime it self!) has a time part defaulting to 00:00:00. The aswer should rather be: with DateTime, you can't. Construct your own structure, or have a look at Noda Time. Sep 21, 2012 at 15:11
  • 27
    @TomasVinter is correct. There is no "strictly-Date" structure in the .NET framework. You will have to create your own. However, DateTime exposes the .ToShortDateTime() method, which will format a string representing only the date portion of the value, and will format the date using the DateFormat configured in the current Culture (Thread.Current.CurrentCulture), so MM-dd-yyyy for US, dd-MMM-yyyy for EU, etc. Dec 18, 2013 at 23:26
  • 24
    To those saying that this is not the correct answer: The answer is correct, but the question is wrong. It displays the questioner's ignorance of the subject. There is no format for the date to have in object form. Format is only meaningful when it is converted into a string. What is actually stored in his object is not 06/26/2009 00:00:00.000, but 63381571200000000, which is the number of Ticks (1/100000000th of a second) since DateTime.MinValue (01/01/0001). If you are going to display the date then convert it to a string, otherwise, it has a time component of midnight. Deal with it.
    – CptRobby
    Apr 29, 2015 at 18:11
218

You can use format strings to give the output string the format you like.

DateTime dateAndTime = DateTime.Now;
Console.WriteLine(dateAndTime.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy")); // Will give you smth like 25/05/2011

Read more about Custom date and time format strings.

10
  • 70
    DateAndTime.ToShortDateString();
    – JWP
    Oct 23, 2014 at 15:55
  • I needed this, but used CultureInfo.DateTimeFormat.ShortDatePattern to be user friendly Dec 12, 2014 at 11:31
  • This will give the incorrect output on locales that do not use this format. Better to use ToShortDateString which is locale aware
    – Matt Wilko
    Apr 25, 2016 at 8:40
  • 2
    Make sure you update the format dd/MM/yyyy to what you want before you use this!
    – slayernoah
    Sep 28, 2016 at 21:48
  • .ToString() with the desired format is exactly what I needed, thanks! Sep 9, 2019 at 20:10
141

Use the method ToShortDateString. See the documentation http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.datetime.toshortdatestring.aspx

var dateTimeNow = DateTime.Now; // Return 00/00/0000 00:00:00
var dateOnlyString = dateTimeNow.ToShortDateString(); //Return 00/00/0000
3
  • 2
    ToShortDateString does not implement IFormatProvider :/
    – Muflix
    May 27, 2019 at 11:27
  • In my case, it returned 00.00.0000, not 00/00/0000 Jul 18, 2019 at 14:55
  • You can set a different value to CultureInfo.CurrentCulture/Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture before using the method to get a different format. Aug 25, 2021 at 17:45
44

Have a look at the DateTime.Date property.

Gets the date component of this instance.

3
  • 27
    you should explain more, this is not an answer this is a link
    – Malachi
    Oct 26, 2012 at 20:52
  • 29
    @Malachi: I've copied and pasted the first line from the linked official API just in case people don't understand hyperlinks.
    – Nick
    Oct 29, 2012 at 14:32
  • var dateTime = DateTime.Now.Date;
    – PrathapG
    Oct 4, 2018 at 3:43
30

The Date property will return the date at midnight.

One option could be to get the individual values (day/month/year) separately and store it in the type you want.

var dateAndTime = DateTime.Now; 
int year = dateAndTime.Year;
int month = dateAndTime.Month;
int day = dateAndTime.Day;

string.Format("{0}/{1}/{2}", month, day, year);
0
25

None of the above answers solved my problem on winforms.

the easiest way to reach ONLY date is the simple function in Datetime:

DateTime dt = DateTime.now;
String BirthDate = dt.ToShortDateString();

You will only have date in Birthday string .

0
17

Try to make your own Structure for that. DateTime object will have date and time both

4
  • 3
    This should be the answer. It appears to be the only answer to the actual question - the time can't be removed from the object. Roll your own, live with the midnight (or time of the day) or work with a ToString representation of what you want. Mar 2, 2014 at 7:09
  • This may be the most correct answer but is also completely academic for all but those with no life, who like reinventing a wheel that turns very nicely on its own. If we are really worried about the added memory used storing an additional long property with our DateTime struct, we have bigger problems, than simply ignoring it.
    – iGanja
    Feb 28, 2015 at 0:51
  • Thanks for the answer. Without creating a Structure, the user can use a string variable in most of the cases. What do you think? Dec 18, 2019 at 1:26
  • @KushanRandima, this is true in most of the cases. However, in the question user does not want in string format hence I suggested this as one of the alternates. Dec 25, 2019 at 8:53
16

You can't. A DateTime in .NET always have a time, defaulting to 00:00:00:000. The Date property of a DateTime is also a DateTime (!), thus having a time defaulting to 00:00:00:000 as well.

This is a shortage in the .NET Framework, and it could be argued that DateTime in .NET violates the Single Responsibility Principle.

7
  • This is the correct answer for this question. DateTime objects will always have Time. Apr 25, 2013 at 10:49
  • 1
    Out of interest, why would you consider this a violation of SRP? If you consider the responsibility is representing a point in time and the class exposes the underlying Ticks property, the Year/Hour/Millisecond properties are purely there to deal with (mainstream) convention.
    – Rob Church
    May 2, 2013 at 13:56
  • Because date and time are two different concepts, unfortunately in the .NET Framework bundled into the same structure. Thus, the structure has more than one responsibility (handling both date AND time), and therefore violates SRP. DateTime in .NET does not just represent a point in time, but many other things as well. Hence, considering it's responsibility to only representing a point in time would be odd. Aug 26, 2013 at 14:27
  • 3
    a point in time, is represented by both date and time. If you tell someone to meet you at 1:00 PM, you are making a huge assumption the person knows what day. Even if today is the day, precision dictates that be explicitly stated. Ergo a single value representing a point in time with any precision MUST include both the date and the time using a reference starting point. Therefore date, from a starting reference, and time, from a starting reference, are clearly the SAME concept; time adding additional precision.
    – iGanja
    Feb 28, 2015 at 0:45
  • 1
    Time alone is useful when you are talking about multiple instances: eg every day at midnight UTC; on the first of every month at noon local time; etc. Arguably, TimeSpan can be used to represent that via convention, but it may be cleaner to have a Time object that represents a point within a 24 hour period and a time zone. Ultimately, there are 3 ideas that DateTime encapsulates: Date, Time, & TimeZone. Oct 5, 2016 at 21:21
14

The easiest way is something like this and it will return only the date:

var date = DateTime.Now.ToShortDateString();
12

Here is another method using String.Format

    DateTime todaysDate = DateTime.UtcNow;

    string dateString = String.Format("{0:dd/MM/yyyy}", todaysDate);

    Console.WriteLine("Date with Time: "+ todaysDate.ToString());

    Console.WriteLine("Date Only : " + dateString);

Output:

Date with Time: 9/4/2016 11:42:16 AM

Date Only : 04/09/2016

This also works if the Date Time is stored in database.

For More Date and Time formatting check these links:

Reference 1

Reference 2

Hope helps.

1
  • The OP explicitly states "I can not use any string conversion methods as I need the date in object form."
    – ChrisF
    Sep 7, 2016 at 14:23
11

DateTime.Date

var newDate = DateTime.Now; //newDate.Date property is date portion of DateTime
2
  • 12
    you should Explain more. this isn't an answer it is a link
    – Malachi
    Oct 26, 2012 at 20:51
  • 3
    var newDate = DateTime.Now; //newDate.Date property is date portion of DateTime. What's unclear? If unclear - follow link.
    – VikciaR
    Jul 30, 2014 at 7:40
10

Since .NET 6 / C# 10 you can do this:

var dateOnly = DateOnly.FromDateTime(dateTime);
9

Use date.ToShortDateString() to get the date without the time component

var date = DateTime.Now
var shortDate = date.ToShortDateString() //will give you 16/01/2019

use date.ToString() to customize the format of the date

var date = DateTime.Now
var shortDate = date.ToString('dd-MMM-yyyy') //will give you 16-Jan-2019
7

This way of get only date without time

DateTime date = DateTime.Now;
string Strdateonly = date.ToString("d");

Output = 5/16/2015

1
  • 2
    Please consider, that a late answer is worth adding (and from other users perspective upvote), only if it is distinctly different from other answers. What is not a case here.
    – m.cekiera
    May 16, 2015 at 13:37
6

I wrote a DateOnly structure. This uses a DateTime under the skin but no time parts are exposed publically:

using System;

public struct DateOnly : IComparable, IFormattable, IComparable<DateOnly>, IEquatable<DateOnly>
{

    private DateTime _dateValue;

    public int CompareTo(object obj)
    {
        if (obj == null)
        {
            return 1;
        }

        DateOnly otherDateOnly = (DateOnly)obj;
        if (otherDateOnly != null)
        {
            return ToDateTime().CompareTo(otherDateOnly.ToDateTime());
        }
        else
        {
            throw new ArgumentException("Object is not a DateOnly");
        }
    }

    int IComparable<DateOnly>.CompareTo(DateOnly other)
    {
        return this.CompareToOfT(other);
    }
    public int CompareToOfT(DateOnly other)
    {
        // If other is not a valid object reference, this instance is greater.
        if (other == new DateOnly())
        {
            return 1;
        }
        return this.ToDateTime().CompareTo(other.ToDateTime());
    }

    bool IEquatable<DateOnly>.Equals(DateOnly other)
    {
        return this.EqualsOfT(other);
    }
    public bool EqualsOfT(DateOnly other)
    {
        if (other == new DateOnly())
        {
            return false;
        }

        if (this.Year == other.Year && this.Month == other.Month && this.Day == other.Day)
        {
            return true;
        }
        else
        {
            return false;
        }
    }

    public static DateOnly Now()
    {
        return new DateOnly(DateTime.Now.Year, DateTime.Now.Month, DateTime.Now.Day);
    }

    public static bool TryParse(string s, ref DateOnly result)
    {
        DateTime dateValue = default(DateTime);
        if (DateTime.TryParse(s, out dateValue))
        {
            result = new DateOnly(dateValue.Year, dateValue.Month, dateValue.Day);
            return true;
        }
        else
        {
            return false;
        }
    }

    public static DateOnly Parse(string s)
    {
        DateTime dateValue = default(DateTime);
        dateValue = DateTime.Parse(s);
        return new DateOnly(dateValue.Year, dateValue.Month, dateValue.Day);
    }

    public static DateOnly ParseExact(string s, string format)
    {
        CultureInfo provider = CultureInfo.InvariantCulture;
        DateTime dateValue = default(DateTime);
        dateValue = DateTime.ParseExact(s, format, provider);
        return new DateOnly(dateValue.Year, dateValue.Month, dateValue.Day);
    }

    public DateOnly(int yearValue, int monthValue, int dayValue) : this()
    {
        Year = yearValue;
        Month = monthValue;
        Day = dayValue;
    }

    public DateOnly AddDays(double value)
    {
        DateTime d = new DateTime(this.Year, this.Month, this.Day);
        d = d.AddDays(value);
        return new DateOnly(d.Year, d.Month, d.Day);
    }

    public DateOnly AddMonths(int months)
    {
        DateTime d = new DateTime(this.Year, this.Month, this.Day);
        d = d.AddMonths(months);
        return new DateOnly(d.Year, d.Month, d.Day);
    }

    public DateOnly AddYears(int years)
    {
        DateTime d = new DateTime(this.Year, this.Month, this.Day);
        d = d.AddYears(years);
        return new DateOnly(d.Year, d.Month, d.Day);
    }

    public DayOfWeek DayOfWeek
    {
        get
        {
            return _dateValue.DayOfWeek;
        }
    }

    public DateTime ToDateTime()
    {
        return _dateValue;
    }

    public int Year
    {
        get
        {
            return _dateValue.Year;
        }
        set
        {
            _dateValue = new DateTime(value, Month, Day);
        }
    }

    public int Month
    {
        get
        {
            return _dateValue.Month;
        }
        set
        {
            _dateValue = new DateTime(Year, value, Day);
        }
    }

    public int Day
    {
        get
        {
            return _dateValue.Day;
        }
        set
        {
            _dateValue = new DateTime(Year, Month, value);
        }
    }

    public static bool operator == (DateOnly aDateOnly1, DateOnly aDateOnly2)
    {
        return (aDateOnly1.ToDateTime() == aDateOnly2.ToDateTime());
    }

    public static bool operator != (DateOnly aDateOnly1, DateOnly aDateOnly2)
    {
        return (aDateOnly1.ToDateTime() != aDateOnly2.ToDateTime());
    }

    public static bool operator > (DateOnly aDateOnly1, DateOnly aDateOnly2)
    {
        return (aDateOnly1.ToDateTime() > aDateOnly2.ToDateTime());
    }

    public static bool operator < (DateOnly aDateOnly1, DateOnly aDateOnly2)
    {
        return (aDateOnly1.ToDateTime() < aDateOnly2.ToDateTime());
    }

    public static bool operator >= (DateOnly aDateOnly1, DateOnly aDateOnly2)
    {
        return (aDateOnly1.ToDateTime() >= aDateOnly2.ToDateTime());
    }

    public static bool operator <= (DateOnly aDateOnly1, DateOnly aDateOnly2)
    {
        return (aDateOnly1.ToDateTime() <= aDateOnly2.ToDateTime());
    }

    public static TimeSpan operator - (DateOnly aDateOnly1, DateOnly aDateOnly2)
    {
        return (aDateOnly1.ToDateTime() - aDateOnly2.ToDateTime());
    }


    public override string ToString()
    {
        return _dateValue.ToShortDateString();
    }

    public string ToString(string format)
    {
        return _dateValue.ToString(format);
    }

    public string ToString(string fmt, IFormatProvider provider)
    {
        return string.Format("{0:" + fmt + "}", _dateValue);
    }

    public string ToShortDateString()
    {
        return _dateValue.ToShortDateString();
    }

    public string ToDbFormat()
    {
        return string.Format("{0:yyyy-MM-dd}", _dateValue);
    }
}

This is converted from VB.NET, so apologies if some conversions are not 100%

5

I'm surprised no one has mentioned DateTime.Today

var date = DateTime.Today;
// {7/1/2014 12:00:00 AM}

See MSDN

1
  • +1 only because your answer produces a date with the correct properties, however the OP wants to remove the time from an existing date, not create a new date.
    – iGanja
    Feb 28, 2015 at 0:54
5

If you are converting it to string, you can easily do it like this.

I'm taking date as your DateTime object.

date.ToString("d");

This will give you only the date.

4

I know this is an old post with many answers, but I haven't seen this way of removing the time portion. Suppose you have a DateTime variable called myDate, with the date with time part. You can create a new DateTime object from it, without the time part, using this constructor:

public DateTime(int year, int month, int day);

Like this:

myDate = new DateTime(myDate.Year, myDate.Month, myDate.Day);

This way you create a new DateTime object based on the old one, with 00:00:00 as time part.

0
4

Add Date property to the DateTime variable

var dateTime = DateTime.Now
var onlyDate = dateTime.Date

Or You can use DataType annotation as well.

[DataType(DataType.Date)]
public DateTime dateTime {get; set;}

The DataType annotation is inside the System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations namespace.

3

You Can Try This for the Only Date From the Datetime

String.Format("{0:d/M/YYYY}",dt);

Where dt is the DateTime

3

Came across this post when trying to solve the original Q.

I am using Asp.Net and after some research I have found when you are binding to the value of the date in code behind, you can drop the time so it will not display on screen.

C#:

DateTime Today = DateTime.Now;

aspx:

<%: this.Today.ToShortDateString() %>
3

use

DateTime.Now.ToString("dd-MM-yyyy");
3

You can use this simple code below.

Code: DateTime.Now.ToShortDateString();

Ex. Console.WriteLine(DateTime.Now.ToShortDateString());

2
string dt = myCalender.SelectedDate.ToString();
string date = dt.Remove(10);
displayDate.Content = date;

If you take date from calender, with this we also get time. Which is not required all time. Using this we can remove time from date.

2

in my experience none of the said solutions worked, maybe because I wanted to remove the time from extracted date from database, but the code below worked fine:

var date = target_date.Value.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy"); 
1
  • The question specifically stated that the date needed to be an object, not a string. This solution returns a string.
    – saluce
    Jun 13, 2012 at 14:27
2

Declare the variable as a string.

example :

public string dateOfBirth ;

then assign a value like :

dateOfBirth = ((DateTime)(datetimevaluefromDB)).ToShortDateString();
1
  • people should read the question, and stop converting structs (on the stack) to objects (on the heap) for no reason.
    – iGanja
    Feb 28, 2015 at 0:58
2

Create a struct that holds only the properties you want. Then an extension method to easily get that struct from an instance of DateTime.

public struct DateOnly
{
    public int Day { get; set; }
    public int Month { get; set; }
    public int Year { get; set; }
}

public static class DateOnlyExtensions
{
    public static DateOnly GetDateOnly(this DateTime dt)
    {
        return new DateOnly
        {
            Day = dt.Day,
            Month = dt.Month,
            Year = dt.Year
        };
    }
}

Usage

DateTime dt = DateTime.Now;
DateOnly result = dt.GetDateOnly();
2

To get only the date portion use the ToString() method,

example: DateTime.Now.Date.ToString("dd/MM/yyyy")

Note: The mm in the dd/MM/yyyy format must be capitalized

1

Use .Date of a DateTime object will ignore the time portion.

Here is code:

DateTime dateA = DateTime.Now;
DateTime dateB = DateTime.Now.AddHours(1).AddMinutes(10).AddSeconds(14);
Console.WriteLine("Date A: {0}",dateA.ToString("o"));
Console.WriteLine("Date B: {0}", dateB.ToString("o"));
Console.WriteLine(String.Format("Comparing objects A==B? {0}", dateA.Equals(dateB)));
Console.WriteLine(String.Format("Comparing ONLY Date property A==B? {0}", dateA.Date.Equals(dateB.Date)));
Console.ReadLine();

Output:

>Date A: 2014-09-04T07:53:14.6404013+02:00
>Date B: 2014-09-04T09:03:28.6414014+02:00
>Comparing objects A==B? False
>Comparing ONLY Date property A==B? True
1

Use a bit of RegEx:

Regex.Match(Date.Now.ToString(), @"^.*?(?= )");

Produces a date in the format: dd/mm/yyyy

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