I am using below code
DateTime dtt=new DateTime();
dtt = Convert.ToDateTime(FromDate);
// DateTime dtt = DateTime.Parse(FromDate); //this also gives the same error
con = new MySqlConnection(conString);
con.Open();
for (int i = 1; i <= TotalDays; i++)
{
string updateHotelBooking = "Update tbl_hotelbookingdetail set `BookedRoom`=`BookedRoom`+"+1+", `AvailableRoom`=`TotalRoom`-`BookedRoom` where `HotelID`="+HotelID+" AND `CurrentDate`='"+dtt.ToString("dd-MM-yyyy")+"'";
MySqlCommand cmd7=new MySqlCommand(updateHotelBooking,con);
cmd7.ExecuteNonQuery();
dtt = dtt.AddDays(1);
}
This code is in one of my webservice which I am using for iPhone application.
here FromDate is string with value in this formate 15-11-2011 which is coming from the application in string format. I am converting it to DateTime because in loop of total days
I need to add day to dtt.
It is working fine on local host with dtt value 15-11-2011 00:00:00
but when I published it,it gives error
String was not recognize as valid DateTime
This is almost certainly because your server uses a different culture by default – and your code is just using the current thread culture.
You can specify this using
DateTime.Parse– or specify the pattern explicitly withDateTime.ParseExactorDateTime.TryParseExact– but we need to know more about where the string is coming from to suggest the best approach. Is it from the user? If so, you should use the user’s culture to parse it. Is it a specific format (e.g. from an XML document) instead? If so, parse using that specific format.Ideally, get rid of the string part entirely – if you’re fetching it from a database for example, can you store it and fetch it as a
DateTimeinstead of as a string? It’s worth trying to reduce the number of string conversions involved as far as possible.EDIT: To parse from a fixed format of dd-MM-yyyy I would use: