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.
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Property Value
Type: System.Int32The 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.