Hour Property

DateTimeOffset.Hour Property

[ This article is for Windows Phone 8 developers. If you’re developing for Windows 10, see the latest documentation. ]

Gets the hour component of the time represented by the current DateTimeOffset object.

Namespace:  System
Assembly:  mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)

'Declaration
Public ReadOnly Property Hour As Integer

Property Value

Type: System.Int32
The hour component of the current DateTimeOffset object. This property uses a 24-hour clock; the value ranges from 0 to 23.

The Hour property is not affected by the value of the Offset property.

You can also create a string representation of a DateTimeOffset object's hour component by calling the ToString method with the "H", or "HH" custom format specifiers.

The following example displays the hour component of a DateTimeOffset object in three different ways:

  • By retrieving the value of the Hour property.

  • By calling the ToString(String) method with the "H" format specifier.

  • By calling the ToString(String) method with the "HH" format specifier.


Dim theTime As New DateTimeOffset(#3/1/2008 2:15:00 PM#, _
                                       DateTimeOffset.Now.Offset)
outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("The hour component of {0} is {1}.", _
                  theTime, theTime.Hour) & vbCrLf

outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("The hour component of {0} is{1}.", _
                  theTime, theTime.ToString(" H")) & vbCrLf

outputBlock.Text &= String.Format("The hour component of {0} is {1}.", _
                  theTime, theTime.ToString("HH")) & vbCrLf
' The example produces the following output:
'    The hour component of 3/1/2008 2:15:00 PM -08:00 is 14.
'    The hour component of 3/1/2008 2:15:00 PM -08:00 is 14.
'    The hour component of 3/1/2008 2:15:00 PM -08:00 is 14.


Windows Phone OS

Supported in: 8.1, 8.0, 7.1, 7.0

Windows Phone

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