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I don't understand why isValid still false even if openDate equal to MINIMUM_Date. I used datePicker to get openDate value.

Update

I removed the time from the Date() and isValid returns true ,but if I input today date I'm getting yesterday date.

     func validateDate(openDate: Date) -> Bool {
                var isValid: Bool = true
          
                let MINIMUM_Date = Date()
                let MINIMUM_DateWithoutTime = MINIMUM_Date.removeTimeStamp.              
                if openDate <= MINIMUM_DateWithoutTime! {
                          isValid = false
                       }
          
                         return isValid
                     }
extension Date {
    public var removeTimeStamp : Date? {
       guard let date = Calendar.current.date(from: Calendar.current.dateComponents([.year, .month, .day], from: self)) else {
        return nil
       }
       return date
   }
}
3
  • When is MINIMUM_Date initialized? You are aware that Date also contains a time part? Jul 15, 2020 at 11:25
  • Exactly so even if 1 millisecond has passed the dates are different, you probably need to format them first and then compare them, or do a difference between them and if you only care about day difference check if the diff is less than 24 hours (that would mean its within the same day) Jul 15, 2020 at 13:41
  • No, you are not getting yesterdays date but when printed it is using UTC time zone and not your local. Note that now your method can be reduced to a single line openDate > Calendar.current.startOfDay(for: Date()) Jul 15, 2020 at 19:55

1 Answer 1

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You are not initialising MINIMUM_Date properly. Initialize current date object on run time when function is called

func validateDate(openDate: Date) -> Bool 

   var isValid: Bool = true          
   var MINIMUM_Date = Date()               
    if openDate < MINIMUM_Date {
        isValid = false
    }
            
    return isValid
}

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