views:

6888

answers:

3

Hi,

I've got an amount of seconds that passed from a certain event. It's stored in a NSTimeInterval data type.

I want to convert it into minutes and seconds.

For example I have: "326.4" seconds and I want to convert it into the following string: "5:26".

What is the best way to achieve this goal?

Thanks.

+12  A: 

pseudo-code:

minutes = floor(326.4/60)
seconds = round(326.4 - minutes * 60)
Brian Ramsay
I think it's also worth mentioning that an NSTimerInterval is just a typedef for double.
Armentage
See Albaregar's answer - it is a better way of doing this (more code but more flexible, maintainable)
benvolioT
+2  A: 

Since it's essentially a double...

Divide by 60.0 and extract the integral part and the fractional part.

The integral part will be the whole number of minutes.

Multiply the fractional part by 60.0 again.

The result will be the remaining seconds.

+14  A: 

Brief Description

  1. The answer from Brian Ramsay is more convenient if you only want to convert to minutes.
  2. If you want Cocoa API do it for you and convert your NSTimeInterval not only to minutes but also to days, months, week, etc,... I think this is a more generic approach
  3. Use NSCalendar method:

    • (NSDateComponents *)components:(NSUInteger)unitFlags fromDate:(NSDate *)startingDate toDate:(NSDate *)resultDate options:(NSUInteger)opts

    • "Returns, as an NSDateComponents object using specified components, the difference between two supplied dates". From the API documentation.

  4. Create 2 NSDate whose difference is the NSTimeInterval you want to convert. (If your NSTimeInterval comes from comparing 2 NSDate you don't need to do this step, and you don't even need the NSTimeInterval).

  5. Get your quotes from NSDateComponents

Sample Code

// The time interval 
NSTimeInterval theTimeInterval = 326.4;

// Get the system calendar
NSCalendar *sysCalendar = [NSCalendar currentCalendar];

// Create the NSDates
NSDate *date1 = [[NSDate alloc] init];
NSDate *date2 = [[NSDate alloc] initWithTimeInterval:theTimeInterval sinceDate:date1]; 

// Get conversion to months, days, hours, minutes
unsigned int unitFlags = NSHourCalendarUnit | NSMinuteCalendarUnit | NSDayCalendarUnit | NSMonthCalendarUnit;

NSDateComponents *conversionInfo = [sysCalendar components:unitFlags fromDate:date1  toDate:date2  options:0];

NSLog(@"Conversion: %dmin %dhours %ddays %dmoths",[conversionInfo minute], [conversionInfo hour], [conversionInfo day], [conversionInfo month]);

[date1 release];
[date2 release];

Known issues

  • Too much for just a conversion, you are right, but that's how the API works.
  • My suggestion: if you get used to manage your time data using NSDate and NSCalendar, the API will do the hard work for you.
Albaregar
Definitively is a lot of workaround just to do a little conversion, but it feels confortable, modular and really flexible, vote up for this sample code @Albaregar.
Rigo Vides