Reputation: 17806
I have a string "11/15/2013 08:00:00
", I want to format it to "11/15/2013
", what is the correct DateTimeFormatter
pattern?
I've tried many and googled and still unable to find the correct pattern.
edit: I am looking for Joda-Time DateTimeFormatter
, not Java's SimpleDateFormat..
Upvotes: 212
Views: 334964
Reputation: 21
easiest way:
DateTime date = new DateTime();
System.out.println(date.toString(DateTimeFormat.forPattern("yyyy-mm-dd")));
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 5944
Note that in JAVA SE 8 a new java.time (JSR-310) package was introduced. This replaces Joda time, Joda users are advised to migrate. For the JAVA SE ≥ 8 way of formatting date and time, see below.
Create a DateTimeFormatter
using DateTimeFormat.forPattern(String)
Using Joda time you would do it like this:
String dateTime = "11/15/2013 08:00:00";
// Format for input
DateTimeFormatter dtf = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("MM/dd/yyyy HH:mm:ss");
// Parsing the date
DateTime jodatime = dtf.parseDateTime(dateTime);
// Format for output
DateTimeFormatter dtfOut = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("MM/dd/yyyy");
// Printing the date
System.out.println(dtfOut.print(jodatime));
Java 8 introduced a new Date and Time library, making it easier to deal with dates and times. If you want to use standard Java version 8 or beyond, you would use a DateTimeFormatter. Since you don't have a time zone in your String
, a java.time.LocalDateTime or a LocalDate, otherwise the time zoned varieties ZonedDateTime and ZonedDate could be used.
// Format for input
DateTimeFormatter inputFormat = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MM/dd/yyyy HH:mm:ss");
// Parsing the date
LocalDate date = LocalDate.parse(dateTime, inputFormat);
// Format for output
DateTimeFormatter outputFormat = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MM/dd/yyyy");
// Printing the date
System.out.println(date.format(outputFormat));
Before Java 8, you would use the a SimpleDateFormat and java.util.Date
String dateTime = "11/15/2013 08:00:00";
// Format for input
SimpleDateFormat dateParser = new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy HH:mm:ss");
// Parsing the date
Date date7 = dateParser.parse(dateTime);
// Format for output
SimpleDateFormat dateFormatter = new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy");
// Printing the date
System.out.println(dateFormatter.format(date7));
Upvotes: 424
Reputation: 57
Please try to this one
public void Method(Datetime time)
{
time.toString("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss"));
}
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 41
UPDATED:
You can: create a constant:
private static final DateTimeFormatter DATE_FORMATTER_YYYY_MM_DD =
DateTimeFormat.forPattern("yyyy-MM-dd"); // or whatever pattern that you need.
This DateTimeFormat is importing from: (be careful with that)
import org.joda.time.format.DateTimeFormat; import org.joda.time.format.DateTimeFormatter;
Parse the Date with:
DateTime.parse(dateTimeScheduled.toString(), DATE_FORMATTER_YYYY_MM_DD);
Before:
DateTime.parse("201711201515",DateTimeFormat.forPattern("yyyyMMddHHmm")).toString("yyyyMMdd");
if want datetime:
DateTime.parse("201711201515", DateTimeFormat.forPattern("yyyyMMddHHmm")).withTimeAtStartOfDay();
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 33856
I am adding this here even though the other answers are completely acceptable. JodaTime has parsers pre built in DateTimeFormat:
dateTime.toString(DateTimeFormat.longDate());
This is most of the options printed out with their format:
shortDate: 11/3/16
shortDateTime: 11/3/16 4:25 AM
mediumDate: Nov 3, 2016
mediumDateTime: Nov 3, 2016 4:25:35 AM
longDate: November 3, 2016
longDateTime: November 3, 2016 4:25:35 AM MDT
fullDate: Thursday, November 3, 2016
fullDateTime: Thursday, November 3, 2016 4:25:35 AM Mountain Daylight Time
Upvotes: 62
Reputation: 241
DateTime date = DateTime.now().withTimeAtStartOfDay();
date.toString("HH:mm:ss")
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 27
This works
String x = "22/06/2012";
String y = "25/10/2014";
String datestart = x;
String datestop = y;
//DateTimeFormatter format = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("dd/mm/yyyy");
SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/mm/yyyy");
Date d1 = null;
Date d2 = null;
try {
d1 = format.parse(datestart);
d2 = format.parse(datestop);
DateTime dt1 = new DateTime(d1);
DateTime dt2 = new DateTime(d2);
//Period
period = new Period (dt1,dt2);
//calculate days
int days = Days.daysBetween(dt1, dt2).getDays();
} catch (ParseException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 11132
I think this will work, if you are using JodaTime:
String strDateTime = "11/15/2013 08:00:00";
DateTime dateTime = DateTime.parse(strDateTime);
DateTimeFormatter fmt = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("MM/dd/YYYY");
String strDateOnly = fmt.print(dateTime);
I got part of this from here.
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 11132
Another way of doing that is:
String date = dateAndTime.substring(0, dateAndTime.indexOf(" "));
I'm not exactly certain, but I think this might be faster/use less memory than using the .split()
method.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2771
I have a very dumb but working option. if you have the String fullDate = "11/15/2013 08:00:00";
String finalDate = fullDate.split(" ")[0];
That should work easy and fast. :)
Upvotes: 11