I want to compare time difference in hours. Based on current time and time I get from database.
DateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat(“yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss”);
Date date = new Date();
Logger.info(“current time is”,sdf.format(date));
// gives date in 2019-11-06 17:03:54
// dB gives following record
Date successDate = loader.getLastSuccess();
// gives date in 2019-10-31T:56:08.066+0000
Both formats are different how to get the time difference any suggestion experts
You can use the java-8 date API Duration to get the duration between both the dates
long hours = Duration.between(date1.toInstant(), date2.toInstant()).toHours();
Note : It can return negative value also here
the number of hours in the duration, may be negative
public int getHours() on util.Date is deprecated, so convert them to Instant and use Duration.between and also i will suggest to use java-8 Date API instead of older version Date
If you want difference in hours as double, you can do this;
Date your_date = loader.getLastSuccess();
Date currentDate = new Date();
double hourdifference = (currentDate.getTime() - your_date.getTime()) / 3600000.0;
You can get long or int, just change 3600000.0 to 3600000, and make the variable int or long
Related
I have two java.time.Instant objects
Instant dt1;
Instant dt2;
I want to get time (only hours and minutes without date) from dt2 and set it to dt1. What is the best way to to this? Using
dt2.get(ChronoField.HOUR_OF_DAY)
throws java.time.temporal.UnsupportedTemporalTypeException
You have to interpret the Instant at some time zone to get ZonedDateTime. As an Instant measures the ellapsed seconds and nano seconds from epoch 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z you should use UTC to get the same time as the Instant would print. (Z ≙ Zulu Time ≙ UTC)
Getting the time
Instant instant;
// get overall time
LocalTime time = instant.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).toLocalTime();
// get hour
int hour = instant.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).getHour();
// get minute
int minute = instant.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).getMinute();
// get second
int second = instant.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).getSecond();
// get nano
int nano = instant.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).getNano();
There are also methods to get days, month and year (getX).
Setting the time
Instants are immutable so you can only "set" the time by creating a copy of your instant with the given time change.
instant = instant.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC)
.withHour(hour)
.withMinute(minute)
.withSecond(second)
.withNano(nano)
.toInstant();
There are also methods to alter days, month and year (withX) as well as methods to add (plusX) or subtract (minusX) time or date values.
To set the time to a value given as a string use: .with(LocalTime.parse("12:45:30"))
Instant does not have any hour / minute. Please read the documentation of Instant class : https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/time/Instant.html
If you use System Timezone to convert the Instant , you can use something like this :
LocalDateTime ldt1 = LocalDateTime.ofInstant(dt1, ZoneId.systemDefault());
LocalDateTime ldt2 = LocalDateTime.ofInstant(dt2, ZoneId.systemDefault());
ldt1 = ldt1
.withHour(ldt2.getHour())
.withMinute(ldt2.getMinute())
.withSecond(ldt2.getSecond());
dt1 = ldt1.atZone(ZoneId.systemDefault()).toInstant();
Convert first the Instant to LocalDateTime, and use UTC as its timezone, then you can get its hours.
import java.time.*
LocalDateTime.ofInstant(Instant.now(), ZoneOffset.UTC).getHour()
While the upper answer is a good, I used it but in Kotlin. Thankyou #frido
while (startDate.isBefore(endDate)) {
val year: Int = startDate.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).year
val month: Int = startDate.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).monthValue
val day: Int = startDate.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).dayOfMonth
System.out.printf("%d.%d.%d\n", day, month, year)
startDate = startDate.atZone(ZoneOffset.UTC).withDayOfMonth(
day + 1
).toInstant()
}
This question already has answers here:
Get yesterday's date using Date [duplicate]
(8 answers)
Closed 8 years ago.
I've got an object with a field timestamp with type java.sql.Timestamp;.
And I need to get objects with yesterday date from a collection.
How to get them?
I mean I need something like this
for(int i = 0; i < items.size(); i++) {
(if the items.get(i).date == yesterday_date)
(get object)
}
You can get yesterday's Date by following approach Answered by Jiger Joshi.
And by using new Timestamp(java.util.Date) you can get yesterday's timestamp, you should use Timestamp#equals to equaling two different timestamp.
if (items.get(i).date.equals(getYesterdaytimestamp())){
...
}
And there are something which you must consider while implementing this. Calender#getTime which returns Date object and date object contains date with time, so in that case your equaling date or timestamp must be exactly equals with yesterday's date and time.
If requirement is, it needs to equal just yesterday no not where time is not considerable fact. In that case you need to equals two timestamp after discarding time part.
if (equalsWithYesterday(items.get(i).date)){
...
}
...
public boolean equalsWithYesterday(Timestamp st){
DateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MM/dd"); // Time part has discarded
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.add(Calendar.DATE, -1);
Date yesterday = dateFormat.parse(dateFormat.format(cal.getTime())); // get yesterday's Date without time part
Date srcDate = new Date(st);
Date srcDateWithoutTime =dateFormat.parse(dateFormat.format(srcDate));
return yesterday.equals(srcDateWithoutTime ); // checks src date equals yesterday.
}
You can convert the timestamp object to date object like this:
Date date = new Date(items.get(i).getTime());
or you can simply use method Timestamp#compareTo(Date o)
items.get(i).compareTo(yesterday_date);
I hope you are not interested to compare the time?
Simply use Calendar class to extract the day, month, year etc. from the date and simply compare it.
Use Calendar#get() method to get the specific field from the date object.
How to subtract one day from the current date?
// get Calendar with current date
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
// get yesterday's date
cal.add(Calendar.DATE, -1);
// get components of yesterday's date
int month = cal.get(Calendar.MONTH) + 1; // 0 for January, 1 for Feb and so on
int day = cal.get(Calendar.DATE);
int year = cal.get(Calendar.YEAR);
// get yesterday's date in milliseconds
long lMillis = cal.getTime().getTime();
I need to compare 2 dates to a third date and ignore the time portion of all of them.
The code below generates a parse exception because the toString() method returns something like "Wed Feb 26 00:00:00 EST 2014".
Any suggestions on how I might fix this?
private boolean needToSendEmail(EmSelfCertEntity escd) throws ParseException {
boolean sendEmail = false;
DateFormat df = new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy");
Date justTheDate = df.parse(escd.getCurrentFCESDate().toString());
Calendar firstSent = Calendar.getInstance();
firstSent.setTime(justTheDate);
justTheDate = df.parse(new Date().toString());
Calendar firstFollowUp = Calendar.getInstance();
firstFollowUp.setTime(justTheDate);
firstFollowUp.add(Calendar.DATE, -daysToFirstFollowUpEmail);
Calendar secondFollowUp = Calendar.getInstance();
secondFollowUp.setTime(justTheDate);
secondFollowUp.add(Calendar.DATE, -daysToSecondFollowUpEmail);
if ((firstSent.before(firstFollowUp) && escd.countEmailsSent <= 1)
|| (firstSent.before(secondFollowUp) && escd.countEmailsSent <= 2)) {
sendEmail = true;
}
return sendEmail;
}
Thanks!
Why are you parsing the String when you already have the Date?
If you want to format your existing Date into the format you specified, use the format() method instead:
String justTheDate = df.format(new Date());
Then you can compare the Strings using the equals() method to check for matches.
Edit- By the way, if Java 8 is an option (it came out on Tuesday!), its new DateTime features will do exactly what you're looking for: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/datetime/
The cause for your exception is that toString in escd.getCurrentFCESDate().toString()
delivers another format than "MM/dd/yyyy".
So make sure that either your format String in line SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy") is correct.
Or check if you can get the year, month, and day directly from getCurrentFCESDate().
Just Use the calendar to create a date, where you take the year, months, day from the existing date but set the hours, minutes, seconds and millis to zero.
The result will be a Date object:
Something like
firstSent.set(Calendar.HOUR, 0);
firstSent.set(Calendar.MINUTE, 0);
firstSent.set(Calendar.SECOND, 0);
firstSent.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0);
Then use before() and after()
The easiest approach would be to convert the dates to numbers in this format: yyyyMMdd.
And after that you can just compare the numbers.
But yes, please work with timezone adjustments before converting to numbers.
you can calculate the time in millis and substract the time with a simple / division.
This way you can compare 2 longs and check if one is bigger than another.
Take this example where we get to different dates for today (500 milliseconds from one to another) but... if you divide by 86400000 then... you get the same number.
Try this:
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
Date d1= new Date();
Thread.sleep(500);
Date d2= new Date();
final int MILLISECONDS = 1000;
final int SECONDS = 60;
final int MINUTES = 60;
final int HOURS = 24;
final long MILLI_PER_DAY= MILLISECONDS*SECONDS*MINUTES*HOURS;
System.out.println(MILLI_PER_DAY);
System.out.println(d1.getTime());
System.out.println(d2.getTime());
System.out.println(d1.getTime()/MILLI_PER_DAY);
System.out.println(d2.getTime()/MILLI_PER_DAY);
}
You will see that the last 2 entries are the same:
1395338535623 --> time 1 in millis
1395338536123 --> time 2 in millis
16149 --> time 1 / 86400000
16149 --> time 2 / 86400000 --> THE SAME
The date is selected by the user using a drop down for year, month and day. I have to compare the user entered date with today's date. Basically see if they are the same date. For example
the user entered 02/16/2012. And if today is 02/16/2012 then I have to display a message. How do I do it?
I tried using milliseconds but that gives out wrong results.
And what kind of object are you getting back? String, Calendar, Date? You can get that string and compare it, at least that you think you'll have problems with order YYYY MM DD /// DD MM YYY in that case I suggest to create a custom string based on your spec YYYYMMDD and then compare them.
Date d1 = new Date();
Date d2 = new Date();
String day1 = d1.getYear()+"/"+d1.getMonth()+"/"+d1.getDate();
String day2 = d2.getYear()+"/"+d2.getMonth()+"/"+d2.getDate();
if(day1.equals(day2)){
System.out.println("Same day");
}
Dates in java are moments in time, with a resolution of "to the millisecond". To compare two dates effectively, you need to first set both dates to the "same time" in hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds. All of the "setTime" methods in a java.util.Date are depricated, because they don't function correctly for the internationalization and localization concerns.
To "fix" this, a new class was introduced GregorianCalendar
GregorianCalendar cal1 = new GregorianCalendar(2012, 11, 17);
GregorianCalendar cal2 = new GregorianCalendar(2012, 11, 17);
return cal1.equals(cal2); // will return true
The reason that GregorianCalendar works is related to the hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds being initialized to zero in the year, month, day constructor. You can attempt to approximate such with java.util.Date by using deprecated methods like setHours(0); however, eventually this will fail due to a lack of setMillis(0). This means that to use the Date format, you need to grab the milliseconds and perform some integer math to set the milliseconds to zero.
date1.setHours(0);
date1.setMinutes(0);
date1.setSeconds(0);
date1.setTime((date1.getTime() / 1000L) * 1000L);
date2.setHours(0);
date2.setMinutes(0);
date2.setSeconds(0);
date2.setTime((date2.getTime() / 1000L) * 1000L);
return date1.equals(date2); // now should do a calendar date only match
Trust me, just use the Calendar / GregorianCalendar class, it's the way forward (until Java adopts something more sophisticated, like joda time.
There is two way you can do it. first one is format both the date in same date format or handle date in string format.
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yyyy");
String date1 = sdf.format(selectedDate);
String date2 = sdf.format(compareDate);
if(date1.equals(date2)){
}else{
}
Or
Calendar toDate = Calendar.getInstance();
Calendar nowDate = Calendar.getInstance();
toDate.set(<set-year>,<set-month>,<set-date->);
if(!toDate.before(nowDate))
//display your report
else
// don't display the report
Above answers are correct but consider using JodaTime - its much simpler and intuitive API.
You could set DateTime using with* methods and compare them.
Look at this answer
How do I add/subtract two time objects. I have two time objects (arrival and departure) in format of "yyyy/MMM/dd HH:mm:ss". I need to print the difference between departure and arrival time. I am generating time ad below:
public String getTime() {
Calendar currentDate = Calendar.getInstance();
SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MMM/dd HH:mm:ss");
return formatter.format(currentDate.getTime());
}
Can I get time in mills and than format it when I needed to print ?
Take a look at Joda Time library.
You can easily subtract and add DateTime and find out interval easily :
// interval from start to end
DateTime start = new DateTime(2004, 12, 25, 0, 0, 0, 0);
DateTime end = new DateTime(2005, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0);
Interval interval = new Interval(start, end);
something like this.....
public long getTimeDiff() throws Exception {
String arrival = "2011/Nov/10 13:15:24";
String departure = "2011/Jan/10 13:15:24";
SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MMM/dd HH:mm:ss");
java.util.Date date1 = formatter.parse(arrival);
java.util.Date date2 = formatter.parse(departure);
return date2.getTime() - date1.getTime();
}
Convert them to date and then to long and subtract, that would give the time difference in milli seconds,
Date d1 = DateFormat.parse(time1);
Date d2 = DateFormat.parse(time2);
long diffInMilliSeconds = d1.getTime()-d2.getTime();
You can get time in milliseconds for both calendars using getTime method. When you can convert the result of subtraction to measure units that you need. If you're going to work with time/duration seriously when take a look at Joda library
Upd. You should call getTime twice. First object being returned is Date, when you call getTime on Date you get long value.
I would convert the two time/Date objects in milliseconds. Then i would subtract them (we are dealing with longs).
Then i would create a Date object from the resulting long value. After that you can construct a Calendar with Calendar.setDate(Date).
Regards!
Yes, start with your Dates and use getTime() to convert to milliseconds (or getTimeInMillis() for your Calendars). That give you long values you can subtract. That's the easy part.
Then you can convert these milliseconds into a readable format yourself. But it probably makes sense to use a packaged library to do it.
Some folks like the Joda library for these types of date calculations. I find Commons Lang is fantastic. It provides DateUtils which is useful if you find you want to perform calculations like rounding or truncating your dates to the nearest minute or hour etc. The part that will be most useful to you is the DurationFormatUtils class which gives you functions like formatDurationHMS to format into nice Hour:Minute:Second display and formatDurationWords to get text (fancy!) or other similar functions to easily format your milliseconds into a nicely human-readable format.