Regarding your three date formats:
The first is just the date format when you look at a NSDate
in a plist in Xcode, a human readable date in the current locale (but if you look at the plist in a text editor, you'll see it's actually written in @"yyyy'-'MM'-'dd'T'HH':'mm':'ss'Z'"
format).
The second is the default formatting from the description
method a NSDate
(e.g. you NSLog
a NSDate
).
The third is RFC 3339/ISO 8601 format (with fractions of a second), often used in web services.
See Apple's Technical Q&A QA1480.
As an aside, that Technical Note doesn't include the milliseconds, so you might want to use something like @"yyyy'-'MM'-'dd'T'HH':'mm':'ss'.'SSS'Z'"
, for example:
NSDate *date = [NSDate date];
NSLocale *enUSPOSIXLocale = [[NSLocale alloc] initWithLocaleIdentifier:@"en_US_POSIX"];
NSDateFormatter *formatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];
formatter.locale = enUSPOSIXLocale;
formatter.dateFormat = @"yyyy'-'MM'-'dd'T'HH':'mm':'ss'.'SSS'Z'";
formatter.timeZone = [NSTimeZone timeZoneForSecondsFromGMT:0];
NSString *dateString = [formatter stringFromDate:date];
NSLog(@"%@", dateString);
You can use this if you want to store the date as a string in RFC 3339/ISO 8601 format in the plist (or alternatively, if you need to convert a NSDate
to a string for transmission to your web service). As noted above, the default plist format does not preserve fractions of a second for NSDate
objects, so if that's critical, storing dates as strings as generated by the above code can be useful.
And this date formatter can be used for converting dates to strings (using stringFromDate
), as well as converting properly formatting strings to NSDate
objects (using dateFromString
).
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