I have a string like "2011-06-02T23:59:59+05:30".
I want to convert it to date format and need to parse only the date, "2011-06-02".
I have a string like "2011-06-02T23:59:59+05:30".
I want to convert it to date format and need to parse only the date, "2011-06-02".
For Ruby 1.9.2:
require 'date' # If not already required. If in Rails then you don't need this line).
puts DateTime.parse("2011-06-02T23:59:59+05:30").to_date.to_s
require 'date'
d = Date.parse("2011-06-02T23:59:59+05:30")
d.strftime("%F")
DateTime.parse()
instead unless you only want to work with dates.
Jun 1, 2014 at 13:08
DateTime.parse
.
Jun 2, 2014 at 9:48
Date.parse()
outputs no different to DateTime.parse()
when using a timestamp with date only. I can't imagine there would be any notable performance advantages of just using Date
...
Jun 5, 2014 at 11:43
Simplies way is
require 'date'
date = "2011-06-02T23:59:59+05:30".gsub(/T.*/, '')
DateTime.parse(date)
Date
instead of DateTime
and ignore the gsub operation ;)
Time.parse() should allow you to parse the whole date time. Then you can use time.strftime( string ) to format that as just a date in a string.
date = Time.parse("2011-06-02T23:59:59+05:30") date_string = time.strftime("%y-%m-%d") of date_string = time.strftime("%F")
(see Ruby Doc for Time for more output string formats) The above should work if you want a string; if you want a date object to handle then the ruby Date class can help you handle it but I belive that everything still needs to be done with Time objects; see Ruby Doc for Date for details of the Date class.
Hope that helps, let me know if I have headed off in the wrong direction with my answer.