Using just the standard library, you can convert a moderately insane date structure into a count of seconds since an arbitrary zero point; then subtract and convert into days:
#include <ctime>
// Make a tm structure representing this date
std::tm make_tm(int year, int month, int day)
{
std::tm tm = {0};
tm.tm_year = year - 1900; // years count from 1900
tm.tm_mon = month - 1; // months count from January=0
tm.tm_mday = day; // days count from 1
return tm;
}
// Structures representing the two dates
std::tm tm1 = make_tm(2012,4,2); // April 2nd, 2012
std::tm tm2 = make_tm(2003,2,2); // February 2nd, 2003
// Arithmetic time values.
// On a posix system, these are seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
std::time_t time1 = std::mktime(&tm1);
std::time_t time2 = std::mktime(&tm2);
// Divide by the number of seconds in a day
const int seconds_per_day = 60*60*24;
std::time_t difference = (time1 - time2) / seconds_per_day;
// To be fully portable, we shouldn't assume that these are Unix time;
// instead, we should use "difftime" to give the difference in seconds:
double portable_difference = std::difftime(time1, time2) / seconds_per_day;
Using Boost.Date_Time is a little less weird:
#include "boost/date_time/gregorian/gregorian_types.hpp"
using namespace boost::gregorian;
date date1(2012, Apr, 2);
date date2(2003, Feb, 2);
long difference = (date1 - date2).days();
It seems like a hassle to me, but maybe there's a simple math formula I'm not thinking about?
It is indeed a hassle, but there is a formula, if you want to do the calculation yourself.
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