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    LocalDateTime, UniversalDateTime... how to compare

    Cinema 4D SDK
    c++ r21 classic api maxon api
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    • fwilleke80F
      fwilleke80
      last edited by fwilleke80

      Hi,

      I need to get the current time and some other time and compare them. Both are possibly in different time zones, so my guess is that using UniversalDateTime and converting to LocalDateTime is the way to go here. I need to find out the difference between currentDate and otherDate in days.

      I could not find an example for this.

      This is the code so far:

      // Get current date
      maxon::LocalDateTime currentDate(maxon::LocalDateTime::GetNow());
      
      // Format string for date parsing
      const Char* dateFormatString = "%Y%m%d";
      
      // Some other date
      String otherDateString = String("20200801"); // For testing, use August 1st 2020
      const maxon::LocalDateTime otherDate = maxon::LocalDateTime::FromString(otherDateString, dateFormatString) iferr_ignore();
      
      // How many days between the dates?
      maxon::UniversalDateTime difference = otherDate.ConvertToUniversalDateTime() - currentDate.ConvertToUniversalDateTime(); // Obviously, not correct
      

      Thanks in advance & cheers,
      Frank

      EDIT: Originally, I had posted two questions. The solution to the first one came to me right after posting, so I removed the question.

      www.frankwilleke.de
      Only asking personal code questions here.

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      • fwilleke80F
        fwilleke80
        last edited by fwilleke80

        Inspired by a posting on Stackoverflow and a page in the SDK docs, I tried it like this:

        std::tm stdCurrentDate = maxon::ConvertLocalDateTimeToTM(currentDate);
        std::tm stdOtherDate = maxon::ConvertLocalDateTimeToTM(otherDate);
        Int32 daysDifference = (Int32)(std::difftime(std::mktime(&stdOtherDate), std::mktime(&stdCurrentDate)) / (60 * 60 * 24));
        

        But it does not compile, because there is no ConvertLocalDateTimeToTM() in the maxon namespace.

        I learned about that function on this documentation page: https://developers.maxon.net/docs/cpp/2023_2/page_maxonapi_maxon_convertlocaldatetimetofromtm.html, which header do I have to include to make it work? It does not seem to be maxon/ansi_type_conversions.h, as that gives me several errors when included.

        www.frankwilleke.de
        Only asking personal code questions here.

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        • fwilleke80F
          fwilleke80
          last edited by fwilleke80

          By the way, the above posted code also throws a rather strange error:

          No member named 'FORBIDDENI_CALL_USE_mktime_r' in namespace 'std'
          Is it possible that it's supposed to be FORBIDDEN_CALL_USE_mktime_r, without the "I" ?

          Also, the documentation for that macro is a bit confusing (ansi_type_conversions.h, line 122):
          // The following functions should be avoided. On Windows and OSX these functions are thread-safe, but not on Windows.
          So, are they thread safe on Windows, or are they not?

          www.frankwilleke.de
          Only asking personal code questions here.

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          • ferdinandF
            ferdinand
            last edited by ferdinand

            Hm,

            I might be overlooking something here, as I just did look at the the docs, but are the arithmetic operators for UniversalDateTime not only defined for TimeValue as being the other operand (Signature for the difference operator), while you are trying to invoke it on another UniversalDateTime?

            Have you considered to just subtract the Unix epoch format representation of your values (via UniversalDateTime::GetUnixTimestamp()) and then convert that result into the desired output format (e.g. days) by simple division?

            edit: eh, I did overlook the "obviously not correct" comment, due to being on an iPad, but the rest should still apply.

            Cheers
            zipit

            MAXON SDK Specialist
            developers.maxon.net

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            • fwilleke80F
              fwilleke80
              last edited by

              That sounds feasible, I'll try that. Thanks!

              www.frankwilleke.de
              Only asking personal code questions here.

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              • fwilleke80F
                fwilleke80
                last edited by

                However, I would still like to know how I can (or why I can't) use ConvertLocalDateTimeToTM(), as it is listed in the SDK docs.

                www.frankwilleke.de
                Only asking personal code questions here.

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                • fwilleke80F
                  fwilleke80
                  last edited by fwilleke80

                  I tried like this:

                  // Format string for date parsing
                  const Char* dateFormatString = "%Y%m%d";
                  
                  // Current date
                  maxon::LocalDateTime currentDate(maxon::LocalDateTime::GetNow());
                  
                  // Get expiry date
                  expirationDateString = String("20191025");
                  maxon::LocalDateTime expirationDate = maxon::LocalDateTime::FromString(expirationDateString, dateFormatString) iferr_ignore();
                  expirationDate._hour = 0;
                  expirationDate._minute = 0;
                  expirationDate._second = 0;
                  expirationDate._daylightSavingTime = maxon::DST::AUTOMATIC;
                  
                  // Convert local to universal datetime
                  maxon::UniversalDateTime universalCurrentDate = currentDate.ConvertToUniversalDateTime();
                  maxon::UniversalDateTime universalExpirationDate = expirationDate.ConvertToUniversalDateTime();
                  
                  // Convert universal datetime to Unix timestamp
                  UInt64 currentDateStamp = universalCurrentDate.GetUnixTimestamp();
                  UInt64 expirationDateStamp = universalExpirationDate.GetUnixTimestamp();
                  
                  // Subtract timestamps
                  UInt64 remainingDaysStamp = expirationDateStamp - currentDateStamp;
                  
                  // Convert seconds to days
                  Int64 daysDifference = remainingDaysStamp / (60 * 60 * 24);
                  

                  But it gives me an incredibly high value for daysDifference, even though the dates are just 4 days apart.

                  Printing the values to the console, these are the surprising results:

                  Current date LOCAL: 2019-10-29 10:51:20 (that is correct!)
                  Expiration date LOCAL: 2019-10-25 00:00:00 (that is what I expected, too)
                  Current date UNIVERSAL: 2019-10-29 09:51:20 (that is also correct)
                  Expiration date UNIVERSAL: 2019-10-24 22:00:00 (why 22:00 ??)
                  Current date UNIX: 1572342680
                  Expiration date UNIX: 1571954400
                  Days difference: 213503982334596 (why??)
                  

                  How cumbersome can it be to just subtract two dates from each other?
                  If I just knew how to use ConvertLocalDateTimeToTM(), the problem would've been long solved.

                  And why is daysDifference so large? If I calculate it myself with a pocket calculator, I get this:

                  (1571954400 - 1572342680) / (60 * 60 * 24) = -4,4939814815
                  

                  And that is exactly why I would expect: About four and a half days.

                  www.frankwilleke.de
                  Only asking personal code questions here.

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                  • ferdinandF
                    ferdinand
                    last edited by ferdinand

                    Hi,

                    hm, I am not much into the finer details of C++ (in this case how C++ handles implicit casts like this), but could it be, that the reason is, that the Unix time stamps returned by the date time objects are unsigned integers (which strikes me as an odd choice anyways, since they are also 64 bit) and you implicitly cast them into a signed integer carrying over an integer overflow? So maybe try casting them into signed integers before or just sort out min/max conditions before.

                    Cheers
                    zipit

                    MAXON SDK Specialist
                    developers.maxon.net

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                    • fwilleke80F
                      fwilleke80
                      last edited by fwilleke80

                      Now that you mention it, I just noticed it, too.

                      I guess that was my daily dose of shame.... πŸ˜•

                      remainingDaysStamp needs to be Int64, not UInt64.

                      Thank you so much, that brought me back on track!

                      Cheers,
                      Frank

                      www.frankwilleke.de
                      Only asking personal code questions here.

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                      • ferdinandF
                        ferdinand
                        last edited by

                        Hi,

                        jeah, oops, I somehow red remainingDaysStamp as being Int64, mixing it up with daysDifference below. This is a straight up integer overflow. But I am not quite sure if changing remainingDaysStamp will be enough, you might have to convert your operand values to signed integers. At least in older versions of C# the compiler behaved that way (trying to implicitly cast int my_int = smaller_uint - bigger_uint; gave you the overflow value).

                        Cheers
                        zipit

                        MAXON SDK Specialist
                        developers.maxon.net

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                        • fwilleke80F
                          fwilleke80
                          last edited by

                          I got it working now. Thank you! πŸ™‚

                          www.frankwilleke.de
                          Only asking personal code questions here.

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                          • r_giganteR
                            r_gigante
                            last edited by

                            Hi Frank, looks like I came too late here πŸ™‚

                            Thanks @zipit and @fwilleke80 for running the conversation.
                            Couple of notes:

                            • do all the maths by using the UniversalDateTime as pointed in our documentation: I don't see any major advance to use the LocalDateTime
                            • use the maxon::UniversalDateTime::FromValues() to convert from year, month, day, hour, min, sec to maxon::UniversalDateTime representation
                            • in case also hours, mins and secs difference gets interesting you can easily extend the code to consider those differences
                            • consider that otherDate shouldn't be necessarily bigger than currentDate
                            • make proper use of error handling.

                            Below my suggested version

                            	iferr_scope;
                            	
                            	// get the current time in UniversalDateTime
                            	const maxon::UniversalDateTime currentUDate(maxon::UniversalDateTime::GetNow());
                            	
                            	// get the other time in UniversalDateTime
                            	const maxon::UniversalDateTime otherUDate = maxon::UniversalDateTime::FromValues(2019, 10, 01, 00, 00, 00) iferr_return;
                            	
                            	// compute the timestamp difference between the twos
                            	UInt64 utDifference = 0;
                            	if (currentUDate > otherUDate)
                            		utDifference = currentUDate.GetUnixTimestamp() - otherUDate.GetUnixTimestamp();
                            	else
                            		utDifference = otherUDate.GetUnixTimestamp() - currentUDate.GetUnixTimestamp();
                            	
                            	// allocate some conversion factors
                            	const Float toMin = 60;
                            	const Float toHour = 60 * toMin;
                            	const Float toDay = 24.0 * toHour;
                            	
                            	// compute the respective temporal differences
                            	const UInt days = UInt(utDifference / toDay);
                            	const UInt hours = UInt((utDifference - days * toDay) / toHour);
                            	const UInt mins = UInt((utDifference - days * toDay - hours * toHour) / toMin);
                            	const UInt secs = UInt(utDifference - days * toDay - hours * toHour - mins * toMin);
                            	
                            	// just print
                            	if (currentUDate > otherUDate)
                            		DiagnosticOutput("Difference between @ and @ is \n\t@ days\n\t@ hours\n\t@ mins\n\t@ secs", currentUDate, otherUDate, days, hours, mins, secs);
                            	else
                            		DiagnosticOutput("Difference between @ and @ is \n\t@ days\n\t@ hours\n\t@ mins\n\t@ secs", otherUDate, currentUDate, days, hours, mins, secs);
                            	
                            	return maxon::OK;
                            

                            Cheers, R

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                            • fwilleke80F
                              fwilleke80
                              last edited by

                              Thank you, Ricardo! πŸ™‚

                              www.frankwilleke.de
                              Only asking personal code questions here.

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