Midnight becomes noon with datetime function
14 views (last 30 days)
Show older comments
I've run into a problem when converting date and time values to Matlab datetime values. The datetime function seems to force midnight (00:00) to noon (12:00). But, when comparing the outputs that look identical, Matlab says they are not. For example:
>> a = datetime(2016,03,01,0,0,0)
a =
datetime
2016 03 01 12 00 00
>> b = datetime(2016,03,01,12,0,0)
b =
datetime
2016 03 01 12 00 00
>> a == b
ans =
logical
0
How is this possible? Am I just missing something, or is there a good solution to correct or avoid this? This seems scary becaues if I'm using the output values in a larger script, how do I know that Matlab isn't confusing midnight and noon, and how would I be able to actually tell which is which?
6 Comments
Walter Roberson
on 7 Aug 2018
What is your system region set to? That could determine the default format for date representation. There is also a Preference about region that can affect the default format.
Accepted Answer
Evan Dailey
on 6 Aug 2018
Edited: Evan Dailey
on 6 Aug 2018
2 Comments
Stephen23
on 7 Aug 2018
"I just assumed datetime values were the values, not formatted strings."
What are "the values" ?
Any time you look at a number or character vector or anything else it is always a representation of the data stored in memory. Unless you enjoy looking at binary bits, all displayed data you look at is displayed according to some set of rules and assumptions: you cannot "see" real datetime "values" any more than you can "see" a real floating point number. Important to note is that representations of the underlying data are equally valid, in just the same way that
3.1
3.14159
0.314159E1
pi
are all equally valid ways to represent the same number. None of them is more "correct" than the other, they just follow different rules and assumptions.
What is the point of this? That any displayed representation of a datetime object will always be formatted according to some rules, so no matter whether you see it as a formatted date string, or a number, or days since some epoch, all of these represent the same data and all follow rules and assumptions. None of them are "the values", they are all just visual representation of the datetime object.
Peter Perkins
on 24 Aug 2018
If your preference is a 12hr clock (it seems like that was unintentional, but if), you can use hh in your display preference, but you'll want to ad an 'a' at the end of the format to show am/pm.
More Answers (0)
See Also
Categories
Find more on Dates and Time in Help Center and File Exchange
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!