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  4. ParseExact - parsing a date with a given format in C++ / MFC

ParseExact - parsing a date with a given format in C++ / MFC

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  • B BadJerry

    Hello, I need a function that would do a parse exact on a CString - given a format - and return a date (or an exception!) Eg COleDateTime timParsed; timParsed.ParseExact("2002 10 3","yyyy mm d"); I am aware of ParseDateTime... but I need something where you actually specify the expected format! And I knoe ParseExact is in .net but hey I am stuck in the nineties! Any idea? Thanks! Jerry

    B Offline
    B Offline
    BadJerry
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    Thanks Jochen And Richard, Yes I used an OpenSource version of strptime() that I found here: http://plibc.sourceforge.net/doxygen/strptime_8c-source.html[^]- and I have transformef the char(s) into TCHAR, added _T, etc.... and I ave written this:

    {
    ...
    CString strFormatCpp = TranslateFormatDate(strFormatVB);

    tm timeDate;
    memset(&timeDate,0,sizeof(tm ));
    TCHAR \* pRes = strptime (strMyDate, strFormatCpp, &timeDate);
    			
    if ( pRes != NULL )
    {
    	COleDateTime oleDate;
    	oleDate.SetDateTime(1900 + timeDate.tm\_year,timeDate.tm\_mon+1,timeDate.tm\_mday,timeDate.tm\_hour,timeDate.tm\_min,timeDate.tm\_sec);
    
    }
    

    }

    CString TranslateFormatDate(const CString & strFormat)
    {
    CString strResult;
    int nChar = 0;
    while ( nChar < strFormat.GetLength() )
    {
    switch ( strFormat[nChar] )
    {
    case 'A':
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("AMPM"),_T("%p"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    break;
    case 'a':
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("ampm"),_T("%p"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) ) // Lower does not exist in C++?
    continue;
    case 'y':
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("yyyy"),_T("%Y"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("yy"),_T("%y"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    break;
    case 'M':
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("MMMM"),_T("%B"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("MMM"),_T("%b"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("MM"),_T("%m"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("M"),_T("%#m"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    break;
    case 'd':
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("dddd"),_T("%A"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("ddd"),_T("%a"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("dd"),_T("%d"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("d"),_T("%#d"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    break;
    case 'h':
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("hh"),_T("%I"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("h"),_T("%#I"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    break;
    case 'H':
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("HH"),_T("%H"),strFormat, nChar,strResult) )
    continue;
    if ( MatchFormatKey(_T("H"),_T("%#H"),strFormat,

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    • B BadJerry

      Hello, I need a function that would do a parse exact on a CString - given a format - and return a date (or an exception!) Eg COleDateTime timParsed; timParsed.ParseExact("2002 10 3","yyyy mm d"); I am aware of ParseDateTime... but I need something where you actually specify the expected format! And I knoe ParseExact is in .net but hey I am stuck in the nineties! Any idea? Thanks! Jerry

      S Offline
      S Offline
      Software_Developer
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      Richard pointed out using strftime( ) . it is standard C.

      #include
      #include

      int main ()
      {
      time_t rawtime;
      struct tm * timeinfo;
      char buffer [80];

      time ( &rawtime );
      timeinfo = localtime ( &rawtime );

      strftime (buffer,80,"%Y %m %d ",timeinfo);

      puts (buffer);

      return 0;
      }

      B 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • S Software_Developer

        Richard pointed out using strftime( ) . it is standard C.

        #include
        #include

        int main ()
        {
        time_t rawtime;
        struct tm * timeinfo;
        char buffer [80];

        time ( &rawtime );
        timeinfo = localtime ( &rawtime );

        strftime (buffer,80,"%Y %m %d ",timeinfo);

        puts (buffer);

        return 0;
        }

        B Offline
        B Offline
        BadJerry
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        Yes but I want to parse not to format! Thanks! Jerry

        L S 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • B BadJerry

          Yes but I want to parse not to format! Thanks! Jerry

          L Offline
          L Offline
          Lost User
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          My apologies, I got mixed up, and cannot for the life of me recall the function that does the parsing. [edit] It's strptime() which, unfortunately, is not available in Windows, so you will need to get a copy of an open source version from somewhere. [/edit]

          One of these days I'm going to think of a really clever signature.

          J 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • B BadJerry

            Hello, I need a function that would do a parse exact on a CString - given a format - and return a date (or an exception!) Eg COleDateTime timParsed; timParsed.ParseExact("2002 10 3","yyyy mm d"); I am aware of ParseDateTime... but I need something where you actually specify the expected format! And I knoe ParseExact is in .net but hey I am stuck in the nineties! Any idea? Thanks! Jerry

            K Offline
            K Offline
            krmed
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            You can still use the ParseDateTime, but you need to set the format first. Here's what I've done... First, get the current format using

            GetLocaleInfo(m\_LCID, LOCALE\_SSHORTDATE, m\_csOriginalSDateFormat.GetBuffer(MAX\_PATH + 1), MAX\_PATH);
            m\_csOriginalSDateFormat.ReleaseBuffer();
            

            (m_csOriginalSDateFormat is a CString) Next have your own CString with the desired format:

            m_csNewSDateFormat = _T("M/d/yyyy");

            Now, set the desired format, parse the date/time, and restore the original format:

            SetLocaleInfo(m_LCID, LOCALE_SSHORTDATE, m_csNewSDateFormat);
            oleStartTime.ParseDateTime(csDateTime);
            SetLocaleInfo(m_LCID, LOCALE_SSHORTDATE, m_csOriginalSDateFormat);

            Hope this helps.

            Karl - WK5M PP-ASEL-IA (N43CS) PGP Key: 0xDB02E193 PGP Key Fingerprint: 8F06 5A2E 2735 892B 821C 871A 0411 94EA DB02 E193

            B 1 Reply Last reply
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            • B BadJerry

              Yes but I want to parse not to format! Thanks! Jerry

              S Offline
              S Offline
              Software_Developer
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              My mistake. Didn't notice that CStrings only compile in MFC.

              char buffer[256];
              CString cs = buffer;

              CString Management[^]

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • K krmed

                You can still use the ParseDateTime, but you need to set the format first. Here's what I've done... First, get the current format using

                GetLocaleInfo(m\_LCID, LOCALE\_SSHORTDATE, m\_csOriginalSDateFormat.GetBuffer(MAX\_PATH + 1), MAX\_PATH);
                m\_csOriginalSDateFormat.ReleaseBuffer();
                

                (m_csOriginalSDateFormat is a CString) Next have your own CString with the desired format:

                m_csNewSDateFormat = _T("M/d/yyyy");

                Now, set the desired format, parse the date/time, and restore the original format:

                SetLocaleInfo(m_LCID, LOCALE_SSHORTDATE, m_csNewSDateFormat);
                oleStartTime.ParseDateTime(csDateTime);
                SetLocaleInfo(m_LCID, LOCALE_SSHORTDATE, m_csOriginalSDateFormat);

                Hope this helps.

                Karl - WK5M PP-ASEL-IA (N43CS) PGP Key: 0xDB02E193 PGP Key Fingerprint: 8F06 5A2E 2735 892B 821C 871A 0411 94EA DB02 E193

                B Offline
                B Offline
                BadJerry
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                That's clever!

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • B BadJerry

                  Hello, I need a function that would do a parse exact on a CString - given a format - and return a date (or an exception!) Eg COleDateTime timParsed; timParsed.ParseExact("2002 10 3","yyyy mm d"); I am aware of ParseDateTime... but I need something where you actually specify the expected format! And I knoe ParseExact is in .net but hey I am stuck in the nineties! Any idea? Thanks! Jerry

                  S Offline
                  S Offline
                  Software_Developer
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  *FACEPALM* COleDateTime::Format MSDN[^]

                  COleDateTime t(1999, 3, 19, 22, 15, 0);

                  CString str = t.Format(_T("%A, %B %d, %Y"));

                  B 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • S Software_Developer

                    *FACEPALM* COleDateTime::Format MSDN[^]

                    COleDateTime t(1999, 3, 19, 22, 15, 0);

                    CString str = t.Format(_T("%A, %B %d, %Y"));

                    B Offline
                    B Offline
                    BadJerry
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    Thanks again... but this is to return a string with a format... What I wanted is to parse a string into a date with a format! Something like

                    COleDatetime t;
                    t.IsThisStringADateWithThisFormat(_T("10012012"),"ddMMyyyy");

                    But I have managed (see my post above)! Thanks anyway! Jerry

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • L Lost User

                      My apologies, I got mixed up, and cannot for the life of me recall the function that does the parsing. [edit] It's strptime() which, unfortunately, is not available in Windows, so you will need to get a copy of an open source version from somewhere. [/edit]

                      One of these days I'm going to think of a really clever signature.

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      jschell
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      Richard MacCutchan wrote:

                      It's strptime() which, unfortunately, is not available in Windows

                      Very odd. Far as I can tell strptime is not part of ANSI C. Which makes me wonder why.

                      L 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • J jschell

                        Richard MacCutchan wrote:

                        It's strptime() which, unfortunately, is not available in Windows

                        Very odd. Far as I can tell strptime is not part of ANSI C. Which makes me wonder why.

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #14

                        It's POSIX according to the man page[^].

                        One of these days I'm going to think of a really clever signature.

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