Assuming you want to convert the xml string value to a proper DateTime
variable, Net has many methods for this:
' a date value in the string format specified:
Dim xmlDate As String = "07/15/2014 7:07:33 AM"
' create a DATE variable from that string in a known format:
Dim newDate As Date = DateTime.ParseExact(xmlDate, "MM/dd/yyyy h:mm:ss tt",
Globalization.CultureInfo.InvariantCulture)
Once you have am actual date variable, you can display it in any format required. Doing so does not change the underlying date value, it just changes the output style:
Dim myDt As DateTime = DateTime.Now
Console.WriteLine(mydt.ToString("dd MMM yy HH:mm tt"))
Console.WriteLine(mydt.ToString("MM/dd/yyyy h:mm:ss"))
DateTime
types are a value; they do not have a format. Formats are for how we display data to humans (as with .ToString()
above) and how we tell DataTime
the pattern to expect when parsing text data from humans into a DateTime
variable.
You must be careful when using many of the VB functions. Some do not create date types at all, just new string variables. CDate
can be especially problematic when using date strings from other cultures . It assumes the string is in the current culture format, which may not be the case. This can lead to 08/07/yyyy
converting to 07/08/yyyy
.
From original question:
I am getting xml response date format string is "MM/dd/yyyy h:mm:ss a"
From comment:
xml returning date format is "7/8/2014 12:00:00 PM"
The format specified in the question does not match the example posted in the comment. The xmlDate text is in fact in M/d/yyyy
format, not MM/dd/yyyy
! Using ParseExact
means we are giving DateTime
the exact format to expect. When the format does not match the actual string pattern, it will fail:
Dim actualDate As Date
Dim xmlTest As String = "7/8/2014 12:00:00 PM"
actualDate = DateTime.ParseExact(xmlSource, "MM/dd/yyyy h:mm:ss tt",
Globalization.CultureInfo.InvariantCulture)
This will fail because the text is not in MM/dd
format. Note that "M/d"
can parse dates from strings in the pattern of "MM/dd"
because some days and months will be 2 characters ("10/20..."). But the reverse is not true: "MM/dd" will require the leading 0
. Specify the correct format and you wont get a format exception:
actualDate = DateTime.ParseExact(xmlSource, "M/d/yyyy h:mm:ss tt",
Globalization.CultureInfo.InvariantCulture)
ParseExact
is probably the best approach here, because it appears you are importing data from elsewhere. For simple data validation of user input, Parse
or TryParse
are usually enough. These will try to parse the text using any of the format patterns defined for the current culture.
Some cultures have well over 100. This means the user can input date data almost anyway they want and your code can still parse/convert it to a DateTime
type.
See DateTime.ParseExact for more information.