How to add minutes to current time in swift

You can use Calendar's method

func date(byAdding component: Calendar.Component, value: Int, to date: Date, wrappingComponents: Bool = default) -> Date?

to add any Calendar.Component to any Date. You can create a Date extension to add x minutes to your UIDatePicker's date:

Xcode 8 and Xcode 9 • Swift 3.0 and Swift 4.0

extension Date {
    func adding(minutes: Int) -> Date {
        return Calendar.current.date(byAdding: .minute, value: minutes, to: self)!
    }
}

Then you can just use the extension method to add minutes to the sender (UIDatePicker):

let section1 = sender.date.adding(minutes: 5)
let section2 = sender.date.adding(minutes: 10)

Playground testing:

Date().adding(minutes: 10)  //  "Jun 14, 2016, 5:31 PM"

Two approaches:

  1. Use Calendar and date(byAdding:to:wrappingComponents:). E.g., in Swift 3 and later:

    let calendar = Calendar.current
    let date = calendar.date(byAdding: .minute, value: 5, to: startDate)
    
  2. Just use + operator (see +(_:_:)) to add a TimeInterval (i.e. a certain number of seconds). E.g. to add five minutes, you can:

    let date = startDate + 5 * 60
    

    (Note, the order is specific here: The date on the left side of the + and the seconds on the right side.)

    You can also use addingTimeInterval, if you’d prefer:

    let date = startDate.addingTimeInterval(5 * 60)
    

Bottom line, +/addingTimeInterval is easiest for simple scenarios, but if you ever want to add larger units (e.g., days, months, etc.), you would likely want to use the calendrical calculations because those adjust for daylight savings, whereas addingTimeInterval doesn’t.


For Swift 2 renditions, see the previous revision of this answer.

Tags:

Ios

Date

Swift