Iphone – Using NSDateFormatter on the iPhone, protect locale but lose date components

iphonensdateformatter

This is a slightly tricky question. I am using NSDateFormatter on the iPhone but I wanted to only show a standard date without the years component. But retain the users locale formatting for their date.

I could easily override the formatting using

[dateFormatter setDateFormat:@"h:mma EEEE MMMM d"];  // hurl.ws/43p9 (date formatting)

But now the date is in my in en-nz format eg 12:01PM Wednesday July 7. So I have totally killed the locale for any other users around the world.

I would like to say.

Give me the correct localized date for this
users region but omit the years
component.

Since the date is being displayed as string, I am tempted to just fromat the date and then remove the year component by just cutting this out of the string.

Best Answer

From iOS 4.0 the correct way of doing it (see the localization session from WWDC 2012), supporting different locale variations out of the box, is using the following API as mentioned above

+dateFormatFromTemplate:options:locale:

For example, to get a long date format without the year:

NSDateFormatter* dateFormatter = [[NSDateFormatter alloc] init];  
NSString *longFormatWithoutYear = [NSDateFormatter dateFormatFromTemplate:@"MMMM d" options:0 locale:[NSLocale currentLocale]]; 
[dateFormatter setDateFormat:longFormatWithoutYear];
//format your date... 
//output will change according to locale. E.g. "July 9" in US or "9 de julho" in Portuguese
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