I have a time interval that spans years and I want all the time components from year down to seconds.
My first thought is to integer divide the time interval by seconds in a year, subtract that from a running total of seconds, divide that by seconds in a month, subtract that from the running total and so on.
That just seems convoluted and I've read that whenever you are doing something that looks convoluted, there is probably a built-in method.
Is there?
I integrated Alex's 2nd method into my code.
It's in a method called by a UIDatePicker in my interface.
NSDate *now = [NSDate date];
NSDate *then = self.datePicker.date;
NSTimeInterval howLong = [now timeIntervalSinceDate:then];
NSDate *date = [NSDate dateWithTimeIntervalSince1970:howLong];
NSString *dateStr = [date description];
const char *dateStrPtr = [dateStr UTF8String];
int year, month, day, hour, minute, sec;
sscanf(dateStrPtr, "%d-%d-%d %d:%d:%d", &year, &month, &day, &hour, &minute, &sec);
year -= 1970;
NSLog(@"%d years\n%d months\n%d days\n%d hours\n%d minutes\n%d seconds", year, month, day, hour, minute, sec);
When I set the date picker to a date 1 year and 1 day in the past, I get:
1 years 1 months 1 days 16 hours 0 minutes 20 seconds
which is 1 month and 16 hours off. If I set the date picker to 1 day in the past, I am off by the same amount.
Update: I have an app that calculates your age in years, given your birthday (set from a UIDatePicker), yet it was often off. This proves there was an inaccuracy, but I can't figure out where it comes from, can you?
Brief Description
Just another approach to complete the answer of JBRWilkinson but adding some code. It can also offers a solution to Alex Reynolds's comment.
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).
Create 2 NSDate whose difference is the NSTimeInterval you want to break down. (If your NSTimeInterval comes from comparing 2 NSDate you don't need to do this step, and you don't even need the NSTimeInterval, just apply the dates to the NSCalendar method).
Get your quotes from NSDateComponents
Sample Code
// The time interval
NSTimeInterval theTimeInterval = ...;
// 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
NSCalendarUnit unitFlags = NSHourCalendarUnit | NSMinuteCalendarUnit | NSDayCalendarUnit | NSMonthCalendarUnit;
NSDateComponents *breakdownInfo = [sysCalendar components:unitFlags fromDate:date1 toDate:date2 options:0];
NSLog(@"Break down: %i min : %i hours : %i days : %i months", [breakdownInfo minute], [breakdownInfo hour], [breakdownInfo day], [breakdownInfo month]);