I need to be able to compare some month names I have in an array.
It would be nice if there were some direct way like:
Month.toInt("January") > Month.toInt("May")
My Google searching seems to suggest the only way is to write your own method, but this seems like a common enough problem that I would think it would have been already implemented in .Net, anyone done this before?
DateTime.ParseExact(monthName, "MMMM", CultureInfo.CurrentCulture ).Month
Although, for your purposes, you'll probably be better off just creating a Dictionary<string, int>
mapping the month's name to its value.
You could do something like this:
Convert.ToDate(month + " 01, 1900").Month
If you use the DateTime.ParseExact()
-method that several people have suggested, you should carefully consider what you want to happen when the application runs in a non-English environment!
In Denmark, which of ParseExact("Januar", ...)
and ParseExact("January", ...)
should work and which should fail?
That will be the difference between CultureInfo.CurrentCulture
and CultureInfo.InvariantCulture
.
One simply solution would be create a Dictionary with names and values. Then using Contains() you can find the right value.
Dictionary<string, string> months = new Dictionary<string, string>()
{
{ "january", "01"},
{ "february", "02"},
{ "march", "03"},
{ "april", "04"},
{ "may", "05"},
{ "june", "06"},
{ "july", "07"},
{ "august", "08"},
{ "september", "09"},
{ "october", "10"},
{ "november", "11"},
{ "december", "12"},
};
foreach (var month in months)
{
if (StringThatContainsMonth.ToLower().Contains(month.Key))
{
string thisMonth = month.Value;
}
}
You can use the DateTime.Parse method to get a DateTime object and then check its Month property. Do something like this:
int month = DateTime.Parse("1." + monthName + " 2008").Month;
The trick is to build a valid date to create a DateTime object.
You can use an enum of months:
public enum Month
{
January,
February,
// (...)
December,
}
public Month ToInt(Month Input)
{
return (int)Enum.Parse(typeof(Month), Input, true));
}
I am not 100% certain on the syntax for enum.Parse(), though.
You don't have to create a DateTime instance to do this. It's as simple as this:
public static class Month
{
public static int ToInt(this string month)
{
return Array.IndexOf(
CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.DateTimeFormat.MonthNames,
month.ToLower(CultureInfo.CurrentCulture))
+ 1;
}
}
I'm running on the da-DK
culture, so this unit test passes:
[Theory]
[InlineData("Januar", 1)]
[InlineData("Februar", 2)]
[InlineData("Marts", 3)]
[InlineData("April", 4)]
[InlineData("Maj", 5)]
[InlineData("Juni", 6)]
[InlineData("Juli", 7)]
[InlineData("August", 8)]
[InlineData("September", 9)]
[InlineData("Oktober", 10)]
[InlineData("November", 11)]
[InlineData("December", 12)]
public void Test(string monthName, int expected)
{
var actual = monthName.ToInt();
Assert.Equal(expected, actual);
}
I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to create an overload where you can pass in an explicit CultureInfo.
And answering this seven years after the question was asked, it is possible to do this comparison using built-in methods:
Month.toInt("January") > Month.toInt("May")
becomes
Array.FindIndex( CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.DateTimeFormat.MonthNames,
t => t.Equals("January", StringComparison.CurrentCultureIgnoreCase)) >
Array.FindIndex( CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.DateTimeFormat.MonthNames,
t => t.Equals("May", StringComparison.CurrentCultureIgnoreCase))
Which can be refactored into an extension method for simplicity. The following is a LINQPad example (hence the Dump()
method calls):
void Main()
{
("January".GetMonthIndex() > "May".GetMonthIndex()).Dump();
("January".GetMonthIndex() == "january".GetMonthIndex()).Dump();
("January".GetMonthIndex() < "May".GetMonthIndex()).Dump();
}
public static class Extension {
public static int GetMonthIndex(this string month) {
return Array.FindIndex( CultureInfo.CurrentCulture.DateTimeFormat.MonthNames,
t => t.Equals(month, StringComparison.CurrentCultureIgnoreCase));
}
}
With output:
False
True
True
If you are using c# 3.0 (or above) you can use extenders
Public Function returnMonthNumber(ByVal monthName As String) As Integer
Select Case monthName.ToLower
Case Is = "january"
Return 1
Case Is = "february"
Return 2
Case Is = "march"
Return 3
Case Is = "april"
Return 4
Case Is = "may"
Return 5
Case Is = "june"
Return 6
Case Is = "july"
Return 7
Case Is = "august"
Return 8
Case Is = "september"
Return 9
Case Is = "october"
Return 10
Case Is = "november"
Return 11
Case Is = "december"
Return 12
Case Else
Return 0
End Select
End Function
caution code is in Beta version.
I translate it into C# code in Spanish version, regards:
public string ObtenerNumeroMes(string NombreMes){
string NumeroMes;
switch(NombreMes) {
case ("ENERO") :
NumeroMes = "01";
return NumeroMes;
case ("FEBRERO") :
NumeroMes = "02";
return NumeroMes;
case ("MARZO") :
NumeroMes = "03";
return NumeroMes;
case ("ABRIL") :
NumeroMes = "04";
return NumeroMes;
case ("MAYO") :
NumeroMes = "05";
return NumeroMes;
case ("JUNIO") :
NumeroMes = "06";
return NumeroMes;
case ("JULIO") :
NumeroMes = "07";
return NumeroMes;
case ("AGOSTO") :
NumeroMes = "08";
return NumeroMes;
case ("SEPTIEMBRE") :
NumeroMes = "09";
return NumeroMes;
case ("OCTUBRE") :
NumeroMes = "10";
return NumeroMes;
case ("NOVIEMBRE") :
NumeroMes = "11";
return NumeroMes;
case ("DICIEMBRE") :
NumeroMes = "12";
return NumeroMes;
default:
Console.WriteLine("Error");
return "ERROR";
}
}
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