How to shift date-time variable to a common start-date/time

9 views (last 30 days)
I have some data formatted as follows:
% Simple example as the "actual_dates" is a large char array.
common_date = datetime(14,1,1,0,0,0) % Define a common start date (01-Jan-0014 00:00:00)
actual_dates = '29-Jan-2014 13:57:30' % This is "char"
Then I run this:
t_diff = actual_dates - common_date % The shift value
and get this weird result:
t_diff = 17532325:57:35
The end goal is to have this:
shifted_date = actual_dates - t_diff
For this particular example, want to have shifted_date = '01-Jan-0014 00:00:00'
How can I fix this? I'm not sure how to convert the 'char' array into a datetime format.

Accepted Answer

Star Strider
Star Strider on 19 Jun 2015
I don’t understand what you want to do, but converting the string to a datetime object is srtaightforward. Doing calculations on them is a bit more involved, since it requires the appropriate functions.
Try this to start:
common_date = datetime(14,1,1,0,0,0);
actual_dates = '29-Jan-2014 13:57:30';
act_date = datetime(actual_dates);
t_diff = between(common_date,act_date)
produces:
t_diff =
2000y 28d 13h 57m 30s
  2 Comments
David O'Brien
David O'Brien on 19 Jun 2015
Edited: David O'Brien on 19 Jun 2015
All I needed to do was to shift multiple sets of recorded dates/times to all start at a certain arbitrary time/date.
Great. Thanks for your help! The between function and using datetime were just what I needed.

Sign in to comment.

More Answers (2)

Katalin
Katalin on 19 Jun 2015
Try this: shifted_date = datetime(actual_dates) - t_diff

Peter Perkins
Peter Perkins on 23 Jun 2015
Edited: Peter Perkins on 23 Jun 2015
Just for the record, this
>> common_date = datetime(14,1,1,0,0,0)
common_date =
01-Jan-0014 00:00:00
>> actual_dates = '29-Jan-2014 13:57:30'
actual_dates =
29-Jan-2014 13:57:30
>> t_diff = actual_dates - common_date
t_diff =
17532325:57:30
does automatically convert the string (no need to explicitly call datetime on it, although of course it doesn't hurt). It seems a little funny that you are creating a datetime in the year 14 (not 2014), but I'll assume you meant to do that. The result simply says that there are 17.5 million hours between those two dates. This
>> t_diff.Format = 'y'
t_diff =
2000.1 yrs
is probably a more useful format, or, as StarStrider suggested, use the between function to get the difference in calendar units.

Categories

Find more on Dates and Time in Help Center and File Exchange

Products

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!