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C#

Date/Time Expires Within N Seconds/Minutes/Hours/Days

Demonstrates the how to tell if a date/time is within N seconds, minutes, hours, or days of the current system time.

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C#
Chilkat.CkDateTime dt = new Chilkat.CkDateTime();

// Set to the current system date/time.
dt.SetFromCurrentSystemTime();
Debug.WriteLine("Now: " + dt.GetAsTimestamp(true));

// Add 10 minutes, making the date 10 minutes in the future.
dt.AddSeconds(600);
Debug.WriteLine("10 minutes from now: " + dt.GetAsTimestamp(true));

// Is the date/time within 10 seconds of expiration (i.e. within 10 seconds of now)?
bool b = dt.ExpiresWithin(10,"seconds");
Debug.WriteLine("Expires within 10 seconds: " + Convert.ToString(b));

// Does the date/time expire within 5 minutes?
b = dt.ExpiresWithin(5,"minutes");
Debug.WriteLine("Expires within 5 minutes: " + Convert.ToString(b));

// Does the date/time expire within 15 minutes?
b = dt.ExpiresWithin(15,"minutes");
Debug.WriteLine("Expires within 15 minutes: " + Convert.ToString(b));

// Does the date/time expire within 1 hour?
b = dt.ExpiresWithin(1,"hour");
Debug.WriteLine("Expires within 1 hour: " + Convert.ToString(b));

// Does the date/time expire within 1 day?
b = dt.ExpiresWithin(1,"day");
Debug.WriteLine("Expires within 1 day: " + Convert.ToString(b));

// Output:

// 	Now: 2017-05-05T23:48:00-0500
// 	10 minutes from now: 2017-05-05T23:58:00-0500
// 	Expires within 10 seconds: False
// 	Expires within 5 minutes: False
// 	Expires within 15 minutes: True
// 	Expires within 1 hour: True
// 	Expires within 1 day: True