29

How do I get the NSDateComponents of a single NSDate? I don't want the components of the difference between 2 dates, just the seconds, minutes, hours, day, month and year of a NSDate?

4 Answers 4

47

There's an example in the Apple docs, Listing 3: Getting a date’s components:

NSDate *today = [NSDate date];
NSCalendar *gregorian = [[NSCalendar alloc]
                         initWithCalendarIdentifier:NSGregorianCalendar];
NSDateComponents *weekdayComponents =
                    [gregorian components:(NSDayCalendarUnit | 
                                           NSWeekdayCalendarUnit) fromDate:today];
NSInteger day = [weekdayComponents day];
NSInteger weekday = [weekdayComponents weekday];

Note that you have to 'or' together the calendar units you want in the call of the components method.

1
  • @martin clayton, Hi, I've set particular time,hours and second to NSDateComponents and now I want to again form date with those NSDateComponents. How can I do that?
    – Kavya Indi
    Sep 26, 2013 at 11:54
9

using NSCalendar's method:

- (NSDateComponents *)components:(NSUInteger)unitFlags fromDate:(NSDate *)date

like:

unsigned unitFlags = NSYearCalendarUnit | NSMonthCalendarUnit |  NSDayCalendarUnit;
NSDate *date = [NSDate date];


NSCalendar * cal = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
NSDateComponents *comps = [cal components:unitFlags fromDate:date];
3

According to Apple Developer documentation, DateComponents has second, minute, hour, day, month, year instance properties. The following Swift 5 Playground code shows how to get seconds, minutes, hours, day, month and year components from a Date instance using DateComponents:

import Foundation

var calendar = Calendar(identifier: .gregorian)
calendar.timeZone = TimeZone(abbreviation: "CET")!
let date = Date()

// Get seconds, minutes, hours, day, month and year
let components = calendar.dateComponents([.second, .minute, .hour, .day, .month, .year], from: date)
let seconds = components.second
let minutes = components.minute
let hours = components.hour
let day = components.day
let month = components.month
let year = components.year

// Print components
print(String(describing: seconds)) // prints Optional(33)
print(String(describing: minutes)) // prints Optional(42)
print(String(describing: hours)) // prints Optional(22)
print(String(describing: day)) // prints Optional(17)
print(String(describing: month)) // prints Optional(12)
print(String(describing: year)) // prints Optional(2016)

/* ... */

// Set a formatter in order to display date
let formatter = DateFormatter()
formatter.dateStyle = .short
formatter.timeStyle = .long
formatter.timeZone = TimeZone(abbreviation: "CET")
formatter.locale = Locale(identifier: "fr_FR")
print(formatter.string(from: date)) // prints 17/12/2016 22:42:33 UTC+1
1

in Swift 2.x the components you want are passed like this.

let gregorianCalendar = NSCalendar(calendarIdentifier: NSCalendarIdentifierGregorian) 
let weekdayHourMinutes = gregorianCalendar?.components([.Weekday, .Hour, .Minute], fromDate: date)

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