Persia.Net is a robust class library, meticulously designed to facilitate seamless conversion between Persian, Gregorian, and Arabic (Hijri) dates. Originally crafted with .NET, it has evolved to ensure compatibility with .NET 6.0, 7.0, and the latest 8.0, making it a versatile tool for a wide range of .NET applications.
To install Persia.Net, run the following command in the Package Manager Console:
PM> Install-Package Persia.Net
You can also view the package page on NuGet.
With the latest update, Persia.Net now includes the following new features:
- Upgrade to .NET 9.0: The package now supports .NET 6.0, 7.0, 8.0 and 9.0, ensuring compatibility with the latest .NET versions.
- String to PersianDateTime Conversion: Convert string representations of Gregorian dates to
PersianDateTime
using the newToPersianDateTime
andTryToPersianDateTime
methods asString
extensions methods.
Persia.Net is a versatile class library designed to seamlessly convert dates between Persian, Gregorian, and Arabic (Hijri) calendars. This guide will show you how to use Persia.Net to convert dates.
You can convert both nullable and non-nullable DateTime
objects to Persian dates using the ToPersianDateTime()
extension method.
Here's an example:
DateTime? nullableDate = new DateTime(2024, 03, 10);
DateTime nonNullableDate = new DateTime(2024, 03, 10);
var convertedNullableDate = nullableDate.ToPersianDateTime();
var convertedNonNullableDate = nonNullableDate.ToPersianDateTime();
In this example, both nullableDate and nonNullableDate are converted to Persian dates.
After converting a date, you can access the day, month, and year components of the Persian date like this:
int day = convertedNullableDate.Day;
int month = convertedNullableDate.Month;
int year = convertedNullableDate.Year;
In this example, day, month, and year will hold the day, month, and year of the Persian date, respectively.
When you run this code, it will print:
Day: 20
Month: 12
Year: 1402
The PersianDateTime
class in the Persia.Net library is a comprehensive utility designed for handling and manipulating dates in the Persian calendar. Here's a brief overview of its capabilities:
Property | Description |
---|---|
Year |
Gets the year component of the date. |
Month |
Gets the month component of the date. |
Day |
Gets the day component of the date. |
Hour |
Gets the hour component of the time. |
Minute |
Gets the minute component of the time. |
Second |
Gets the second component of the time. |
Millisecond |
Gets the millisecond component of the time. |
Ticks |
Gets the number of ticks that represent the time. |
DayOfWeek |
Gets the day number of the week. This number is zero-based. |
DaysInMonth |
Gets the days of the month. |
WeekOfMonth |
Gets the week number of the month. |
WeekOfYear |
Gets the week number of the year. |
MonthName |
Gets the name of the current month. |
DayOfWeekName |
Gets the day name of the week in the Persian Calendar. |
IsLeapYear |
Gets a value indicating whether the current Persian year is a leap year. |
DayOfYear |
Gets the number of days that have passed since the beginning of the current year in the Persian calendar. |
DaysRemainingInYear |
Gets the number of days remaining until the end of the current year in the Persian calendar. |
Now |
Gets the current date and time in the Persian calendar. |
UtcNow |
Gets the current date and time in the Persian calendar in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). |
Today |
Gets the current date in the Persian calendar. |
The provided code snippet is a simple example of converting a Gregorian date to a Persian date using ToPersianDateTime()
extension method.
var date = new DateTime(2024, 03, 10); // Define a Gregorian date
// Convert the Gregorian date to a Persian date
var convertedDateString = date.ToPersianDateTime().ToString();
Console.WriteLine(convertedDateString);
// The result of the conversion is "1402/12/20"
In addition to date conversion, the PersianDateTime
class also includes built-in string generation methods. These methods transform the converted DateTime into a human-readable Persian string, providing a more intuitive representation of the date and time in Persian. The following table outlines these methods:
Method | Description |
---|---|
ToShortPersianString |
Converts the date to a string in the format "yyyy/MM/dd" with Persian numbers. برای مثال, ۱۴۰۲/۱۲/۲۰ |
ToPersianString |
Converts the date to a string in the Persian format with Year and Day in digit and Month in word. برای مثال, ۲۰ اسفند ۱۴۰۲ |
ToLongPersianString |
Converts the date to a string in the Persian format with Year and Day in digit and Month in word as well as weekday name and time. برای مثال, یکشنبه ۲۰ اسفند ۱۴۰۲ |
ToPersianDayMonthString |
Converts the date to a string in the Persian format with Year in digit and Day and Month in words. برای مثال, بیستم اسفند ۱۴۰۲ |
ToPersianWeekdayString |
Converts the date to a string in Persian as well as week day name. برای مثال, یکشنبه ۱۴۰۲/۱۲/۲۰ |
ToLongPersianOrdinalWords |
Converts the date to a string in the Persian format with Year in digit and Day and Month in words as well as weekday name. برای مثال, یکشنبه بیستم اسفند ۱۴۰۲ |
In .NET, the PersianDateTime
class provides straightforward methods for converting Persian dates to Gregorian dates or DateTime
. Specifically, the ToDateTime
and ToDateOnly
methods can be utilized for this purpose. Both of these methods are available as static and instance methods within the PersianDateTime
class. This allows for flexible usage depending on the specific requirements of your code.
The ToDateTime
method in the PersianDateTime
class allows you to convert a Persian date to a Gregorian DateTime
. This method is static and takes three parameters: year
, month
, and day
.
public static DateTime ToDateTime(int year, int month, int day)
year
: The year component of the Persian date.month
: The month component of the Persian date.day
: The day component of the Persian date.
This method returns a DateTime
object representing the equivalent Gregorian date and the current time of day.
Here’s an example of how to use this method:
// Define a Persian date
int year = 1403;
int month = 1;
int day = 1;
// Convert the Persian date to a Gregorian DateTime
DateTime gregorianDate = PersianDateTime.ToDateTime(year, month, day);
// Output the result
Console.WriteLine(gregorianDate);
In the previous example, the time components (hour, minute, second, and millisecond) of the converted DateTime are derived from the system clock. However, if you wish to specify your own time values for the conversion, you can do so using the overloaded ToDateTime methods. These methods allow you to pass in the hour, minute, second, and optionally, the millisecond, along with the year, month, and day.
Here is the method signature for this overload:
DateTime ToDateTime(int year, int month, int day, int hour, int minute, int second, int millisecond = 0)
If you're only interested in the date portion of the converted DateTime
, you can use the ToDateOnly
method. This method returns a DateOnly
object, which represents the converted Persian date without any time values.
Here's the method signature for your reference:
DateOnly ToDateOnly(int year, int month, int day)
The HumanizePersianDateTimePassed
method in the PersianDateTime
class allows you to convert the time difference between the current date and a provided date into a human-readable format.
string HumanizePersianDateTimePassed(int partsToPrint = 3)
string HumanizePassedPersianDateTime(TimeUnit timeUnit)
By default, this method generates a human-readable format with three components. However, if you prefer a more detailed output, you can specify up to six components. To do this, simply pass the desired number of components as an argument to this method.
Here's an example:
// Define a DateTime
var date = new DateTime(2023, 12, 21);
// Humanize the time difference between the current date and the provided date
var humanizedPersian = date.HumanizePersianDateTimePassed();
// Output the result
Console.WriteLine(humanizedPersian);
// The result of the conversion is "۱۱ ماه و ۳۶۲ روز و ۲ ساعت پیش"
Additionally, if you prefer to display the elapsed time in terms of a single time unit, you can specify this as an argument to the method. For instance, if you want to express the elapsed time solely in terms of days, you can pass TimeUnit.Days as an argument to the method.
Here’s how you can do this:
var humanizedPersian = date.HumanizePassedPersianDateTime(TimeUnit.Days);
In this example, HumanizePassedPersianDateTime
will return the elapsed time since the specified date, expressed solely in terms of days. This allows for a more focused representation of the elapsed time.
Here are the enumerable TimeUnit
values:
Months
Days
Hours
Minutes
Seconds
If you're interested in obtaining information about the current week or month in the Persian calendar, this library offers specific DateTime
extension methods designed for this purpose. These methods include:
CurrentPersianWeek
: Retrieves the current week.NextPersianWeek
: Retrieves the next week.PreviousPersianWeek
: Retrieves the previous week.CurrentPersianMonth
: Retrieves the current month.NextPersianMonth
: Retrieves the next month.PreviousPersianMonth
: Retrieves the previous month.
These methods provide a convenient way to navigate through the Persian calendar, allowing you to easily access and manipulate date-related data.
These methods return an array of PersianDateTime
objects, each containing detailed information about the requested week or month.
In the above image, you can see the date-related data for the next week of a given date as a PersianDateTime
array.
The provided code snippet is a simple example of converting a Gregorian date to an Islamic date using ToIslamicDateTime()
extension method.
var date = new DateTime(2024, 03, 26); // Define a Gregorian date
// Convert the Gregorian date to an Islamic date
var dtIslamic = date.ToIslamicDateTime(); // returns an object of IslamicDateTime class
Console.WriteLine(dtIslamic.Year);
Console.WriteLine(dtIslamic.Month);
Console.WriteLine(dtIslamic.Day);
In addition to date conversion, the IslamicDateTime
class also includes built-in string generation methods. These methods transform the converted DateTime into a human-readable Islamic string, providing a more intuitive representation of the date and time in Islamic. The following table outlines these methods:
Method | Description |
---|---|
ToString |
Converts the date to a string in the format "yyyy/MM/dd". برای مثال, 1445/09/17 |
ToShortArabicString |
Converts the date to a string in the format "yyyy/MM/dd" with Arabic numbers. برای مثال, ١٤٤٥/٠٩/١٧ |
ToArabicString |
Converts the date to a string in the Arabic format with Year and Day in digit and Month in word. برای مثال, ١٧ رمضان ١٤٤٥ |
ToLongArabicString |
Converts the date to a string in the Arabic format with Year and Day in digit and Month in word as well as weekday name. برای مثال, الاربعا ١٧ رمضان ١٤٤٥ |
The PersianDateTime class contains ToIslamicDateTime
and ToIslamicDateOnly
methods to convert a Persian (Solar Hijri) date to an Islamic (Lunar Hijri) date. The ToIslamicDateTime
method also includes time conversion. These methods are existing in both static and instance methods.
The ToIslamicDateTime
method takes seven parameters: the year, month, day, hour, minute, second, and an optional millisecond from the Persian date while, The ToIslamicDateOnly
method takes three parameters: the year, month, and day from the Persian date.
Here’s a small sample code to demonstrate the conversion:
var persianDate = new PersianDateTime(1403, 01, 09);
// Convert the Persian date to an Islamic date string
var islamicDate = persianDate.ToIslamicDateTime().ToString();
// Print the Islamic date
Console.WriteLine(islamicDate);
The IslamicDateTime
class contains ToPersianDateTime
and ToPersianDateOnly
methods to convert an Islamic (Lunar Hijri) date to a Persian (Solar Hijri) date. The ToPersianDateTime
method also includes time conversion. These methods are existing in both static and instance methods.
The ToPersianDateTime
method takes seven parameters: the year, month, day, hour, minute, second, and an optional millisecond from the Islamic date. It uses a Converter to convert the Islamic date to a Persian date, sets the time, and returns the resulting Persian date and time.
The ToPersianDateOnly
method takes three parameters: the year, month, and day from the Islamic date. It uses a Converter to convert the Islamic date to a Persian date and returns the resulting Persian date.
Here’s a small sample code to demonstrate the conversion:
var islamicDate = new IslamicDateTime(1445, 09, 18);
// Convert the Islamic date to a Persian date string
var persianDate = islamicDate.ToPersianDateOnly().ToString();
// Print the Persian date
Console.WriteLine(persianDate);
With this enhancement, you can directly convert a DateOnly
object to a PersianDateTime
or an IslamicDateTime
object. This means you no longer need to first convert DateOnly
to a DateTime
object before converting to PersianDateTime
or IslamicDateTime
. This reduces the steps involved, making your code more efficient and readable.
Here’s an example of how you can now directly convert a DateOnly
object to a PersianDateTime
:
DateOnly dateOnly = // a DateOnly object comes from...;
PersianDateTime persianDate = dateOnly.ToPersianDateTime();
All the DateTime
extensions that have been introduced by Persia.Net have also been extended to the DateOnly
struct. That is, all the methods and properties you’re accustomed to using with DateTime
objects are now directly accessible on DateOnly
objects.