Brief Description
- The answer from Brian Ramsay is more convenient if you only want to convert to minutes.
- If you want Cocoa API do it for you and convert your NSTimeInterval not only to minutes but also to days, months, week, etc,… I think this is a more generic approach
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Use NSCalendar method:
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(NSDateComponents *)components:(NSUInteger)unitFlags fromDate:(NSDate *)startingDate toDate:(NSDate *)resultDate options:(NSUInteger)opts
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“Returns, as an NSDateComponents object using specified components, the difference between two supplied dates”. From the API documentation.
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Create 2 NSDate whose difference is the NSTimeInterval you want to convert. (If your NSTimeInterval comes from comparing 2 NSDate you don’t need to do this step, and you don’t even need the NSTimeInterval).
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Get your quotes from NSDateComponents
Sample Code
// The time interval
NSTimeInterval theTimeInterval = 326.4;
// Get the system calendar
NSCalendar *sysCalendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];
// Create the NSDates
NSDate *date1 = [[NSDate alloc] init];
NSDate *date2 = [[NSDate alloc] initWithTimeInterval:theTimeInterval sinceDate:date1];
// Get conversion to months, days, hours, minutes
unsigned int unitFlags = NSHourCalendarUnit | NSMinuteCalendarUnit | NSDayCalendarUnit | NSMonthCalendarUnit;
NSDateComponents *conversionInfo = [sysCalendar components:unitFlags fromDate:date1 toDate:date2 options:0];
NSLog(@"Conversion: %dmin %dhours %ddays %dmoths",[conversionInfo minute], [conversionInfo hour], [conversionInfo day], [conversionInfo month]);
[date1 release];
[date2 release];
Known issues
- Too much for just a conversion, you are right, but that’s how the API works.
- My suggestion: if you get used to manage your time data using NSDate and NSCalendar, the API will do the hard work for you.