DateTimeOffset.ParseExact Method (String, String, IFormatProvider)
[ This article is for Windows Phone 8 developers. If you’re developing for Windows 10, see the latest documentation. ]
Converts the specified string representation of a date and time to its DateTimeOffset equivalent using the specified format and culture-specific format information. The format of the string representation must match the specified format exactly.
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
'Declaration Public Shared Function ParseExact ( _ input As String, _ format As String, _ formatProvider As IFormatProvider _ ) As DateTimeOffset
Parameters
- input
- Type: System.String
A string that contains a date and time to convert.
- format
- Type: System.String
A format specifier that defines the expected format of input.
- formatProvider
- Type: System.IFormatProvider
An object that supplies culture-specific formatting information about input.
Return Value
Type: System.DateTimeOffsetAn object that is equivalent to the date and time that is contained in input, as specified by format and formatProvider.
| Exception | Condition |
|---|---|
| ArgumentException | The offset is greater than 14 hours or less than -14 hours. |
| ArgumentNullException | input is Nothing. -or- format is Nothing. |
| FormatException | input is an empty string (""). -or- input does not contain a valid string representation of a date and time. -or- format is an empty string. |
The ParseExact(String, String, IFormatProvider) method parses the string representation of a date, which must be in the format defined by the format parameter. It also requires that the <Date>, <Time>, and <Offset> elements of the string representation of a date and time appear in the order specified by format. If the input string does not match this format parameter, the method throws a FormatException. In contrast, the DateTimeOffset.Parse(String, IFormatProvider) method parses the string representation of a date in any one of the formats recognized by the formatProvider parameter's DateTimeFormatInfo object. Parse also allows the <Date>, <Time>, and <Offset> elements of the string representation of a date and time to appear in any order.
The format parameter is a string that contains either a single standard format specifier or one or more custom format specifiers that define the required format of the input parameter. If format includes the z, zz, or zzz custom format specifiers to indicate that an offset must be present in input, that offset must include either a negative sign or a positive sign. If the sign is missing, the method throws a FormatException.
If format requires that input contain a date but not a time, the resulting DateTimeOffset object is assigned a time of midnight (0:00:00). If format requires that input contain a time but not a date, the resulting DateTimeOffset object is assigned the current date on the local system. If format does not require that input contain an offset, the resulting DateTimeOffset object is assigned the time zone offset of the local system.
The particular date and time symbols and strings used in input are defined by the formatProvider parameter, as is the precise format of input if format is a standard format specifier string. The formatProvider parameter can be either of the following:
A CultureInfo object that represents the culture based on which input is interpreted. The DateTimeFormatInfo object returned by its DateTimeFormat property defines the symbols and formatting in input.
A DateTimeFormatInfo object that defines the format of date and time data.
If formatprovider is Nothing, the CultureInfo object that corresponds to the current culture is used.
The following example uses the DateTimeOffset.ParseExact(String, String, IFormatProvider) method with standard and custom format specifiers and the invariant culture to parse several date and time strings.
Dim dateString, format As String Dim result As DateTimeOffset Dim provider As CultureInfo = CultureInfo.InvariantCulture ' Parse date-only value with invariant culture. dateString = "06/15/2008" format = "d" Try result = DateTimeOffset.ParseExact(dateString, format, provider) outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("{0} converts to {1}.", dateString, result.ToString()) & vbCrLf Catch e As FormatException outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("{0} is not in the correct format.", dateString) & vbCrLf End Try ' Parse date-only value without leading zero in month using "d" format. ' Should throw a FormatException because standard short date pattern of ' invariant culture requires two-digit month. dateString = "6/15/2008" Try result = DateTimeOffset.ParseExact(dateString, format, provider) outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("{0} converts to {1}.", dateString, result.ToString()) & vbCrLf Catch e As FormatException outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("{0} is not in the correct format.", dateString) & vbCrLf End Try ' Parse date and time with custom specifier. dateString = "Sun 15 Jun 2008 8:30 AM -06:00" format = "ddd dd MMM yyyy h:mm tt zzz" Try result = DateTimeOffset.ParseExact(dateString, format, provider) outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("{0} converts to {1}.", dateString, result.ToString()) & vbCrLf Catch e As FormatException outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("{0} is not in the correct format.", dateString) & vbCrLf End Try ' Parse date and time with offset without offset's minutes. ' Should throw a FormatException because "zzz" specifier requires leading ' zero in hours. dateString = "Sun 15 Jun 2008 8:30 AM -06" Try result = DateTimeOffset.ParseExact(dateString, format, provider) outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("{0} converts to {1}.", dateString, result.ToString()) & vbCrLf Catch e As FormatException outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("{0} is not in the correct format.", dateString) & vbCrLf End Try ' The example displays the following output: ' 06/15/2008 converts to 6/15/2008 12:00:00 AM -07:00. ' 6/15/2008 is not in the correct format. ' Sun 15 Jun 2008 8:30 AM -06:00 converts to 6/15/2008 8:30:00 AM -06:00. ' Sun 15 Jun 2008 8:30 AM -06 is not in the correct format.