Fast ISO8601 date parser and writer for iOS & Mac.
Carthage is the recommended way to install ISO8601. Add the following to your Cartfile:
github "soffes/ISO8601"
You can also install with CocoaPods:
pod 'ISO8601'
For manual installation, I recommend adding the project as a subproject to your project or workspace and adding the framework as a target dependency.
First, import the appropriate header:
@import ISO8601; // Use #import <ISO8601/ISO8601.h> if you're using CocoaPods
This library uses NSDateComponents
for reading and writing. Here's an example:
// Reading
NSDateComponents *dateComponents = [ISO8601Serialization dateComponentsForString:@"1999-05-19T23:55:21+09:00"];
// Writing
NSString *ISO8601String = [ISO8601Serialization stringForDateComponents:dateComponents];
There is an NSDate
category for convenient conversion:
// Reading
NSDate *date = [NSDate dateWithISO8601String:@"1999-05-19T23:55:21+09:00"];
// Writing
NSString *ISO8601String = [date ISO8601String];
If you require more control over conversion or need to know the input time zone, you can use the advanced methods the category provides:
// Reading
NSTimeZone *timeZone;
NSDate *date = [NSDate dateWithISO8601String:@"1999-05-19T23:55:21+09:00" timeZone:&timeZone usingCalendar:calendarOrNil];
// Writing
NSString *ISO8601String = [date ISO8601StringWithTimeZone:timeZoneOrNil usingCalendar:calendarOrNil];
NSDateComponents
is the core data structure because NSDate
doesn't perserve time zone information well.
It's worth noting that a value in the NSDateComponents
will be nil
if it is not in the input string. For example, 1999-05-19T23:55:21
will have a nil
time zone, but 1999-05-19T23:55:21+00:00
and 1999-05-19T23:55:21Z
will have a UTC time zone.
The +[NSDate dateWithISO8601String:]
category will always return a UTC date. If you want a date in another time zone, you should use +[NSDate ISO8601StringWithTimeZone:usingCalendar:]
(you may pass nil
for the calendar parameter to use the current calendar).
Enjoy.