KoreanCalendar.GetDaysInYear Method (Int32, Int32)
[ This article is for Windows Phone 8 developers. If you’re developing for Windows 10, see the latest documentation. ]
Returns the number of days in the specified year in the specified era.
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Parameters
- year
- Type: System.Int32
An integer that represents the year.
- era
- Type: System.Int32
An integer that represents the era.
| Exception | Condition |
|---|---|
| ArgumentOutOfRangeException | year is outside the range supported by the calendar. -or- era is outside the range supported by the calendar. |
The following code example calls the GetDaysInYear method for five years in each era.
using System; using System.Globalization; public class Example { public static void Demo(System.Windows.Controls.TextBlock outputBlock) { // Creates and initializes a KoreanCalendar. KoreanCalendar myCal = new KoreanCalendar(); // Displays the header. outputBlock.Text += "YEAR\t"; for (int y = 4334; y <= 4338; y++) outputBlock.Text += String.Format("\t{0}", y); outputBlock.Text += "\n"; // Displays the value of the CurrentEra property. outputBlock.Text += "CurrentEra:"; for (int y = 4334; y <= 4338; y++) outputBlock.Text += String.Format("\t{0}", myCal.GetDaysInYear(y, KoreanCalendar.CurrentEra)); outputBlock.Text += "\n"; // Displays the values in the Eras property. for (int i = 0; i < myCal.Eras.Length; i++) { outputBlock.Text += String.Format("Era {0}:\t", myCal.Eras[i]); for (int y = 4334; y <= 4338; y++) outputBlock.Text += String.Format("\t{0}", myCal.GetDaysInYear(y, myCal.Eras[i])); outputBlock.Text += "\n"; } } } /* This code produces the following output. YEAR 4334 4335 4336 4337 4338 CurrentEra: 365 365 365 366 365 Era 1: 365 365 365 366 365 */
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