QTime Class

The QTime class provides clock time functions. More...

Header: #include <QTime>
CMake: find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Core)
target_link_libraries(mytarget PRIVATE Qt6::Core)
qmake: QT += core

Note: All functions in this class are reentrant.

Public Functions

QTime()
QTime(int h, int m, int s = 0, int ms = 0)
QTime addMSecs(int ms) const
QTime addSecs(int s) const
int hour() const
bool isNull() const
bool isValid() const
int minute() const
int msec() const
int msecsSinceStartOfDay() const
int msecsTo(QTime t) const
int second() const
int secsTo(QTime t) const
bool setHMS(int h, int m, int s, int ms = 0)
QString toString(const QString &format) const
QString toString(Qt::DateFormat format = Qt::TextDate) const
QString toString(QStringView format) const

Static Public Members

QTime currentTime()
QTime fromMSecsSinceStartOfDay(int msecs)
QTime fromString(const QString &string, Qt::DateFormat format = Qt::TextDate)
QTime fromString(QStringView string, Qt::DateFormat format = Qt::TextDate)
QTime fromString(QStringView string, QStringView format)
QTime fromString(const QString &string, QStringView format)
QTime fromString(const QString &string, const QString &format)
bool isValid(int h, int m, int s, int ms = 0)
bool operator!=(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)
bool operator<(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)
QDataStream &operator<<(QDataStream &out, QTime time)
bool operator<=(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)
bool operator==(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)
bool operator>(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)
bool operator>=(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)
QDataStream &operator>>(QDataStream &in, QTime &time)

Detailed Description

A QTime object contains a clock time, which it can express as the numbers of hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds since midnight. It provides functions for comparing times and for manipulating a time by adding a number of milliseconds. QTime objects should be passed by value rather than by reference to const; they simply package int.

QTime uses the 24-hour clock format; it has no concept of AM/PM. Unlike QDateTime, QTime knows nothing about time zones or daylight-saving time (DST).

A QTime object is typically created either by giving the number of hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds explicitly, or by using the static function currentTime(), which creates a QTime object that represents the system's local time.

The hour(), minute(), second(), and msec() functions provide access to the number of hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds of the time. The same information is provided in textual format by the toString() function.

The addSecs() and addMSecs() functions provide the time a given number of seconds or milliseconds later than a given time. Correspondingly, the number of seconds or milliseconds between two times can be found using secsTo() or msecsTo().

QTime provides a full set of operators to compare two QTime objects; an earlier time is considered smaller than a later one; if A.msecsTo(B) is positive, then A < B.

QTime objects can also be created from a text representation using fromString() and converted to a string representation using toString(). All conversion to and from string formats is done using the C locale. For localized conversions, see QLocale.

See also QDate and QDateTime.

Member Function Documentation

QString QTime::toString(QStringView format) const

QString QTime::toString(const QString &format) const

Returns the time as a string. The format parameter determines the format of the result string.

These expressions may be used:

ExpressionOutput
hThe hour without a leading zero (0 to 23 or 1 to 12 if AM/PM display)
hhThe hour with a leading zero (00 to 23 or 01 to 12 if AM/PM display)
HThe hour without a leading zero (0 to 23, even with AM/PM display)
HHThe hour with a leading zero (00 to 23, even with AM/PM display)
mThe minute without a leading zero (0 to 59)
mmThe minute with a leading zero (00 to 59)
sThe whole second, without any leading zero (0 to 59)
ssThe whole second, with a leading zero where applicable (00 to 59)
z or zzThe fractional part of the second, to go after a decimal point, without trailing zeroes. Thus "s.z" reports the seconds to full available (millisecond) precision without trailing zeroes (0 to 999). For example, "s.z" would produce "0.25" for a time a quarter second into a minute.
zzzThe fractional part of the second, to millisecond precision, including trailing zeroes where applicable (000 to 999). For example, "ss.zzz" would produce "00.250" for a time a quarter second into a minute.
AP or AUse AM/PM display. A/AP will be replaced by 'AM' or 'PM'. In localized forms (only relevant to QLocale::toString()), the locale-appropriate text is converted to upper-case.
ap or aUse am/pm display. a/ap will be replaced by 'am' or 'pm'. In localized forms (only relevant to QLocale::toString()), the locale-appropriate text is converted to lower-case.
aP or ApUse AM/PM display (since 6.3). aP/Ap will be replaced by 'AM' or 'PM'. In localized forms (only relevant to QLocale::toString()), the locale-appropriate text (returned by QLocale::amText() or QLocale::pmText()) is used without change of case.
tThe timezone abbreviation (for example "CEST"). Note that time zone abbreviations are not unique. In particular, toString() cannot parse this.
ttThe timezone's offset from UTC with no colon between the hours and minutes (for example "+0200").
tttThe timezone's offset from UTC with a colon between the hours and minutes (for example "+02:00").
ttttThe timezone name (for example "Europe/Berlin"). Note that this gives no indication of whether the datetime was in daylight-saving time or standard time, which may lead to ambiguity if the datetime falls in an hour repeated by a transition between the two. The name used is the one provided by QTimeZone::displayName() with the QTimeZone::LongName type. This may depend on the operating system in use.

Any non-empty sequence of characters enclosed in single quotes will be included verbatim in the output string (stripped of the quotes), even if it contains formatting characters. Two consecutive single quotes ("''") are replaced by a single quote in the output. All other characters in the format string are included verbatim in the output string.

Formats without separators (e.g. "ddMM") are supported but must be used with care, as the resulting strings aren't always reliably readable (e.g. if "dM" produces "212" it could mean either the 2nd of December or the 21st of February).

Example format strings (assuming that the QTime is 14:13:09.042)

FormatResult
hh:mm:ss.zzz14:13:09.042
h:m:s ap2:13:9 pm
H:m:s a14:13:9 pm

If the time is invalid, an empty string will be returned.

Note: To get localized forms of AM or PM (the AP, ap, A, a, aP or Ap formats), use QLocale::system().toString().

Note: If a format character is repeated more times than the longest expression in the table above using it, this part of the format will be read as several expressions with no separator between them; the longest above, possibly repeated as many times as there are copies of it, ending with a residue that may be a shorter expression. Thus 'HHHHH' for the time 08:00 will contribute "08088" to the output.

See also fromString(), QDate::toString(), QDateTime::toString(), and QLocale::toString().

[constexpr] QTime::QTime()

Constructs a null time object. For a null time, isNull() returns true and isValid() returns false. If you need a zero time, use QTime(0, 0). For the start of a day, see QDate::startOfDay().

See also isNull() and isValid().

QTime::QTime(int h, int m, int s = 0, int ms = 0)

Constructs a time with hour h, minute m, seconds s and milliseconds ms.

h must be in the range 0 to 23, m and s must be in the range 0 to 59, and ms must be in the range 0 to 999.

See also isValid().

QTime QTime::addMSecs(int ms) const

Returns a QTime object containing a time ms milliseconds later than the time of this object (or earlier if ms is negative).

Note that the time will wrap if it passes midnight. See addSecs() for an example.

Returns a null time if this time is invalid.

See also addSecs(), msecsTo(), and QDateTime::addMSecs().

QTime QTime::addSecs(int s) const

Returns a QTime object containing a time s seconds later than the time of this object (or earlier if s is negative).

Note that the time will wrap if it passes midnight.

Returns a null time if this time is invalid.

Example:

QTime n(14, 0, 0);                // n == 14:00:00
QTime t;
t = n.addSecs(70);                // t == 14:01:10
t = n.addSecs(-70);               // t == 13:58:50
t = n.addSecs(10 * 60 * 60 + 5);  // t == 00:00:05
t = n.addSecs(-15 * 60 * 60);     // t == 23:00:00

See also addMSecs(), secsTo(), and QDateTime::addSecs().

[static] QTime QTime::currentTime()

Returns the current time as reported by the system clock.

Note that the accuracy depends on the accuracy of the underlying operating system; not all systems provide 1-millisecond accuracy.

Furthermore, currentTime() only increases within each day; it shall drop by 24 hours each time midnight passes; and, beside this, changes in it may not correspond to elapsed time, if a daylight-saving transition intervenes.

See also QDateTime::currentDateTime() and QDateTime::currentDateTimeUtc().

[static constexpr] QTime QTime::fromMSecsSinceStartOfDay(int msecs)

Returns a new QTime instance with the time set to the number of msecs since the start of the day, i.e. since 00:00:00.

If msecs falls outside the valid range an invalid QTime will be returned.

See also msecsSinceStartOfDay().

[static] QTime QTime::fromString(const QString &string, Qt::DateFormat format = Qt::TextDate)

Returns the time represented in the string as a QTime using the format given, or an invalid time if this is not possible.

See also toString() and QLocale::toTime().

[static, since 6.0] QTime QTime::fromString(QStringView string, Qt::DateFormat format = Qt::TextDate)

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[static, since 6.0] QTime QTime::fromString(QStringView string, QStringView format)

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[static, since 6.0] QTime QTime::fromString(const QString &string, QStringView format)

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[static] QTime QTime::fromString(const QString &string, const QString &format)

Returns the QTime represented by the string, using the format given, or an invalid time if the string cannot be parsed.

These expressions may be used for the format:

ExpressionOutput
hThe hour without a leading zero (0 to 23 or 1 to 12 if AM/PM display)
hhThe hour with a leading zero (00 to 23 or 01 to 12 if AM/PM display)
HThe hour without a leading zero (0 to 23, even with AM/PM display)
HHThe hour with a leading zero (00 to 23, even with AM/PM display)
mThe minute without a leading zero (0 to 59)
mmThe minute with a leading zero (00 to 59)
sThe whole second, without any leading zero (0 to 59)
ssThe whole second, with a leading zero where applicable (00 to 59)
z or zzThe fractional part of the second, as would usually follow a decimal point, without requiring trailing zeroes (0 to 999). Thus "s.z" matches the seconds with up to three digits of fractional part supplying millisecond precision, without needing trailing zeroes. For example, "s.z" would recognize either "00.250" or "0.25" as representing a time a quarter second into its minute.
zzzThree digit fractional part of the second, to millisecond precision, including trailing zeroes where applicable (000 to 999). For example, "ss.zzz" would reject "0.25" but recognize "00.250" as representing a time a quarter second into its minute.
AP, A, ap, a, aP or ApEither 'AM' indicating a time before 12:00 or 'PM' for later times, matched case-insensitively.

All other input characters will be treated as text. Any non-empty sequence of characters enclosed in single quotes will also be treated (stripped of the quotes) as text and not be interpreted as expressions.

QTime time = QTime::fromString("1mm12car00", "m'mm'hcarss");
// time is 12:01.00

If the format is not satisfied, an invalid QTime is returned. Expressions that do not expect leading zeroes to be given (h, m, s and z) are greedy. This means that they will use two digits (or three, for z) even if this puts them outside the range of accepted values and leaves too few digits for other sections. For example, the following string could have meant 00:07:10, but the m will grab two digits, resulting in an invalid time:

QTime time = QTime::fromString("00:710", "hh:ms"); // invalid

Any field that is not represented in the format will be set to zero. For example:

QTime time = QTime::fromString("1.30", "m.s");
// time is 00:01:30.000

Note: If localized forms of am or pm (the AP, ap, Ap, aP, A or a formats) are to be recognized, use QLocale::system().toTime().

Note: If a format character is repeated more times than the longest expression in the table above using it, this part of the format will be read as several expressions with no separator between them; the longest above, possibly repeated as many times as there are copies of it, ending with a residue that may be a shorter expression. Thus 'HHHHH' would match "08088" or "080808" and set the hour to 8; if the time string contained "070809" it would "match" but produce an inconsistent result, leading to an invalid time.

See also toString(), QDateTime::fromString(), QDate::fromString(), QLocale::toTime(), and QLocale::toDateTime().

int QTime::hour() const

Returns the hour part (0 to 23) of the time.

Returns -1 if the time is invalid.

See also minute(), second(), and msec().

[constexpr] bool QTime::isNull() const

Returns true if the time is null (i.e., the QTime object was constructed using the default constructor); otherwise returns false. A null time is also an invalid time.

See also isValid().

bool QTime::isValid() const

Returns true if the time is valid; otherwise returns false. For example, the time 23:30:55.746 is valid, but 24:12:30 is invalid.

See also isNull().

[static] bool QTime::isValid(int h, int m, int s, int ms = 0)

This is an overloaded function.

Returns true if the specified time is valid; otherwise returns false.

The time is valid if h is in the range 0 to 23, m and s are in the range 0 to 59, and ms is in the range 0 to 999.

Example:

QTime::isValid(21, 10, 30); // returns true
QTime::isValid(22, 5,  62); // returns false

int QTime::minute() const

Returns the minute part (0 to 59) of the time.

Returns -1 if the time is invalid.

See also hour(), second(), and msec().

int QTime::msec() const

Returns the millisecond part (0 to 999) of the time.

Returns -1 if the time is invalid.

See also hour(), minute(), and second().

[constexpr] int QTime::msecsSinceStartOfDay() const

Returns the number of msecs since the start of the day, i.e. since 00:00:00.

See also fromMSecsSinceStartOfDay().

int QTime::msecsTo(QTime t) const

Returns the number of milliseconds from this time to t. If t is earlier than this time, the number of milliseconds returned is negative.

Because QTime measures time within a day and there are 86400 seconds in a day, the result is always between -86400000 and 86400000 ms.

Returns 0 if either time is invalid.

See also secsTo(), addMSecs(), and QDateTime::msecsTo().

int QTime::second() const

Returns the second part (0 to 59) of the time.

Returns -1 if the time is invalid.

See also hour(), minute(), and msec().

int QTime::secsTo(QTime t) const

Returns the number of seconds from this time to t. If t is earlier than this time, the number of seconds returned is negative.

Because QTime measures time within a day and there are 86400 seconds in a day, the result is always between -86400 and 86400.

secsTo() does not take into account any milliseconds.

Returns 0 if either time is invalid.

See also addSecs() and QDateTime::secsTo().

bool QTime::setHMS(int h, int m, int s, int ms = 0)

Sets the time to hour h, minute m, seconds s and milliseconds ms.

h must be in the range 0 to 23, m and s must be in the range 0 to 59, and ms must be in the range 0 to 999. Returns true if the set time is valid; otherwise returns false.

See also isValid().

QString QTime::toString(Qt::DateFormat format = Qt::TextDate) const

This is an overloaded function.

Returns the time as a string. The format parameter determines the format of the string.

If format is Qt::TextDate, the string format is HH:mm:ss; e.g. 1 second before midnight would be "23:59:59".

If format is Qt::ISODate, the string format corresponds to the ISO 8601 extended specification for representations of dates, represented by HH:mm:ss. To include milliseconds in the ISO 8601 date, use the format Qt::ISODateWithMs, which corresponds to HH:mm:ss.zzz.

If the format is Qt::RFC2822Date, the string is formatted in an RFC 2822 compatible way. An example of this formatting is "23:59:20".

If the time is invalid, an empty string will be returned.

See also fromString(), QDate::toString(), QDateTime::toString(), and QLocale::toString().

Related Non-Members

[constexpr] bool operator!=(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)

Returns true if lhs is different from rhs; otherwise returns false.

[constexpr] bool operator<(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)

Returns true if lhs is earlier than rhs; otherwise returns false.

QDataStream &operator<<(QDataStream &out, QTime time)

Writes time to stream out.

See also Serializing Qt Data Types.

[constexpr] bool operator<=(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)

Returns true if lhs is earlier than or equal to rhs; otherwise returns false.

[constexpr] bool operator==(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)

Returns true if lhs is equal to rhs; otherwise returns false.

[constexpr] bool operator>(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)

Returns true if lhs is later than rhs; otherwise returns false.

[constexpr] bool operator>=(QTime lhs, QTime rhs)

Returns true if lhs is later than or equal to rhs; otherwise returns false.

QDataStream &operator>>(QDataStream &in, QTime &time)

Reads a time from stream in into the given time.

See also Serializing Qt Data Types.

© 2024 The Qt Company Ltd. Documentation contributions included herein are the copyrights of their respective owners. The documentation provided herein is licensed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software Foundation. Qt and respective logos are trademarks of The Qt Company Ltd. in Finland and/or other countries worldwide. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.