Use the ToString() method to convert a DateTime to a string: MMMM dd, yyyy : DateTime Format « Date Time « C# / CSharp Tutorial






using System;

class MainClass
{
  public static void Main()
  {
    DateTime myDateTime = new DateTime(2004, 1, 12, 22, 2, 10);
    Console.WriteLine("myDateTime.ToString() = " + myDateTime.ToString());
    Console.WriteLine("myDateTime.ToString(\"MMMM dd, yyyy\") = " + myDateTime.ToString("MMMM dd, yyyy"));
  }
}
myDateTime.ToString() = 12/01/2004 10:02:10 PM
myDateTime.ToString("MMMM dd, yyyy") = January 12, 2004








13.3.DateTime Format
13.3.1.DateTime Formatting
13.3.2.Format time and date: {0:hh:mm tt}
13.3.3.Format time and date: 24 hour time is {0:HH:mm}
13.3.4.Format time and date: Date is {0:ddd MMM dd, yyyy}
13.3.5.Format time and date: Date is {0:gg}
13.3.6.Format time and date: Time with seconds{0:HH:mm:ss tt}
13.3.7.Format time and date: Use m for day of month{0:m}
13.3.8.Format time and date: use m for minutes: {0:%m}
13.3.9.Format time and date information.
13.3.10.Use the ToLongDateString() and ToShortDateString() methods to convert the date parts of a DateTime to long and short date strings
13.3.11.Use the ToLongTimeString() and ToShortTimeString() methods to convert the time parts of a DateTime to long and short time strings
13.3.12.Use the ToString() method to convert a DateTime to a string: MMMM dd, yyyy
13.3.13.Use the ToString() method to convert a DateTime to a string: d, D, f, F, g, G, m ,r, s, t,T, u, U, y
13.3.14.Pre-built date/time specifiers
13.3.15.Culture-insensitive DateTime format strings
13.3.16.Culture-sensitive DateTime format strings
13.3.17.Format DateTime for different CultureInfo
13.3.18.DateTime long date pattern
13.3.19.Format DateTime with %M
13.3.20.DateTime custime format: MMMM dd, yyyy (dddd)
13.3.21.Format DayOfWeek