0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views

Date, DateTime, and Time functions - Power Platform _ Microsoft Learn

The document explains the Date, Time, and DateTime functions used in Power Platform to convert individual date and time components into Date/Time values. It details the syntax and behavior of each function, including how to handle years, months, days, hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds. Examples are provided to illustrate how to use these functions in practice.

Uploaded by

shekharpatel1639
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views

Date, DateTime, and Time functions - Power Platform _ Microsoft Learn

The document explains the Date, Time, and DateTime functions used in Power Platform to convert individual date and time components into Date/Time values. It details the syntax and behavior of each function, including how to handle years, months, days, hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds. Examples are provided to illustrate how to use these functions in practice.

Uploaded by

shekharpatel1639
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

Date, DateTime, and Time functions

Article • 06/10/2024

Applies to: Canvas apps Desktop flows Model-driven apps Power


Pages Power Platform CLI

Converts date and time components to a date/time value.

Description
The Date function converts individual Year, Month, and Day values to a Date/Time value.
The time portion is midnight.
If Year is between 0 and 1899 (inclusive), the function adds that value to 1900 to
calculate the year. 70 becomes 1970.
If Month is less than 1 or more than 12, the result subtracts or adds that many
months from the beginning of the specified year.
If Day is greater than the number of days in the specified month, the function adds
that many days to the first day of the month and returns the corresponding date
from a subsequent month. If Day is less than 1, the function subtracts that many
days, plus 1, from the first day of the specified month.

The Time function converts individual Hour, Minute, Second, and optionally Millisecond
values to a Date/Time value. The result has no date associated with it.

The DateTime function combines the Date and Time functions into a single function,
taking both date and time arguments and returning a Date/Time value that has both
date and time components.

See the DateValue, TimeValue, and DateTimeValue functions for information about how
to convert a string to a value.

Also see working with dates and times for more information.

Syntax
Date( Year, Month, Day )

Year - Required. Numbers greater than 1899 are interpreted as absolute (1980 is
interpreted as 1980); numbers that range from 0 to 1899 are interpreted as relative
to 1900. (For example, 80 is interpreted as 1980.)
Month - Required. A number that ranges from 1 to 12.
Day - Required. A number that ranges from 1 to 31.
Time( Hour, Minute, Second [, Milliseconds ] )

Hour - Required. Number of hours, usually in the range 0 (12:00 AM) to 23 (11:00
PM).
Minute - Required. Number of minutes, usually in the range 0 to 59.
Second - Required. Number of seconds, usually in the range 0 to 59.
Milliseconds - Optional. Number of milliseconds, usually in the range 0 to 999.

DateTime( Year, Month, Day, Hour, Minute, Second [, Milliseconds ] )


Year - Required. Numbers greater than 1899 are interpreted as absolute (1980 is
interpreted as 1980); numbers that range from 0 to 1899 are interpreted as relative
to 1900. (For example, 80 is interpreted as 1980.)
Month - Required. A number that ranges from 1 to 12.
Day - Required. A number that ranges from 1 to 31.
Hour - Required. Number of hours, usually in the range 0 (12:00 AM) to 23 (11:00
PM)
Minute - Required. Number of minutes, usually in the range 0 to 59.
Second - Required. Number of seconds, usually in the range 0 to 59.
Milliseconds - Optional. Number of milliseconds, usually in the range 0 to 999.

Examples
Date
If a user typed
1979 in a text-input control named HireYear
3 in a text-input control named HireMonth
17 in a text-input control named HireDay

this formula would return 3/17/1979 :

Power Fx

Date( Value(HireYear.Text), Value(HireMonth.Text),


Value(HireDay.Text) )

Time
If a user typed

14 in a text-input control named BirthHour


50 in a text-input control named BirthMinute
24 in a text-input control named BirthSecond
this formula would return 02:50:24 P :

Power Fx

Text(
Time(Value(BirthHour.Text), Value(BirthMinute.Text),
Value(BirthSecond.Text)),
"hh:mm:ss A/P"
)

DateTime
If a user typed
2023 in a text-input control named EclipseYear
10 in a text-input control named EclipseMonth
28 in a text-input control named EclipseDate
13 in a text-input control named EclipseHour
14 in a text-input control named EclipseMinute
5 in a text-input control named EclipseSecond
231 in a text-input control named EclipseMillisecond
this formula would return 10/28/23 01:14:05.231 PM :

Power Fx

Text(
DateTime(Value(EclipseYear.Text), Value(EclipseMonth.Text),
Value(EclipseDate.Text),
Value(EclipseHour.Text), Value(EclipseMinute.Text),
Value(EclipseSecond.Text), Value(EclipseSecond.Millisecond)
),
"yy/mm/dd hh:mm:ss.000 AM/PM"
)

Feedback
Was this page helpful?  Yes  No
Provide product feedback

You might also like