This question already has answers here:
How to convert current date into string in java?
(9 answers)
Java string to date conversion
(17 answers)
Closed 8 years ago.
I have java.util.Date 02/26/2015. I want to convert it like Feburary 26,2015 as String. How can I convert it like that ??
like what goes here ??
DateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("here");
Use this format:
DateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("EEE dd,yyyy");
As descripted in the documentation of SimpleDateFormat:
E Day name in week
d Day in month
y Year
You use SimpleDateFormat
DateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("MMMM dd, yyyy");
The format above is:
MMMM Month in year,
dd Day in month,
yyyy Year,
Please read the manual for more possibilities of how to format dates properly.
SimpleDateFormat format=new SimpleDateFormat("MMMM dd, yyyy");
Related
This question already has answers here:
"EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss ZZZ yyyy" date format to java.sql.Date
(2 answers)
Java SimpleDateFormat always returning January for Month
(4 answers)
Y returns 2012 while y returns 2011 in SimpleDateFormat
(5 answers)
Closed 1 year ago.
In my app, I noticed that the day from the datetime is wrong
By using:
DateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("YYYY-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
final Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
date = dateFormat.format(cal.getTime());
It gives me 2021-02-49 09:41:29, as you can see. the day from the datetime is 49. Why is it like that?
This question already has answers here:
"EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss ZZZ yyyy" date format to java.sql.Date
(2 answers)
Parsing a string to date format in java defaults date to 1 and month to January
(2 answers)
Java SimpleDateFormat always returning January for Month
(4 answers)
Closed 4 years ago.
I have a timestamp 13 Dec 2018 19:37:18 which I need to convert to 2018-12-13 19:37:18, I am following the below steps but it is giving incorrect timestamp
DateFormat outputFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss");
DateFormat inputFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("DD MMM YYYY HH:mm:ss");
Date date = inputFormat.parse(updatedStartime);
String NewStartTime = outputFormat.format(date);
I am getting the output as 2018-Jan-01 19:37:18, Do I need to convert the MMM to integer month value before formatting the output? what is the correct step to get the expected output?
D is "day in year"; not "day in month" what you actually need, so d.
Y is "week years"; i guess you meant y for normal year
So in all that would be:
DateFormat outputFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
DateFormat inputFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("dd MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss", Locale.US);
For more details look at the javadoc https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html
This question already has answers here:
Month issue in SimpleDateFormat class
(6 answers)
Closed 5 years ago.
I am trying to get a Date object in the format YYYY-MM-DD representing the current system date. Below is my attempt:
Date todayDate = Calendar.getInstance().getTime();
SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-mm-dd");
String todayString = formatter.format(todayDate);
The values are as follows:
todayDate: Mon May 15 16:24:47 GMT+01:00 2017
todayString: 2017-24-15
Having tried this a couple of times I noticed the todayString is not made up of YYYY-MM-DD but YYYY-[minutes][minutes]-DD.
How might I get the current date in the YYYY-MM-DD format?
Change this:
SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-mm-dd");
to this:
SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
mm stands for the minutes, while MM (capitalized) stands for the month
This question already has answers here:
Java string to date conversion
(17 answers)
Closed 8 years ago.
I downloaded date information from an API which is in the format of (Java)
day month monthnumber hour:minute:second EST year
how can I format this into just
month monthnumber year
You could use SimpleDateFormat to first parse the string to a java.util.Date, and then format it to the format you want:
String orig = "Thu Feb 19 19:40:12 EST 2015";
SimpleDateFormat parser = new SimpleDateFormat("EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss z yyyy");
Date date = parser.parse(orig);
SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("MMM dd yyyy");
String formatted = formatter.format(date);
This question already has an answer here:
The date format issue from java
(1 answer)
Closed 9 years ago.
I have strings like:
02/03/07 11:13:33 CEST or
02/03/07 11:13:33 CET.
How do I parse it to a util.Date in such a way that it considers cet/cest?
You need to use SimpleDateFormat object to do it:
Date d=new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yy HH:mm:ss z").parse(string);
Here z stands for the zone.
Use a SimpleDateFormat with the right format string:
DateFormat df = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yy HH:mm:ss z");
String text1 = "02/03/07 11:13:33 CEST";
String text2 = "02/03/07 11:13:33 CET";
Date d1 = df.parse(text1);
Date d2 = df.parse(text2);