28

I got the answer: It's very simple.

DateTimeFormatter fmt = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("MM/dd/yyyy");
String formattedDate = jodeLocalDateObj.toString( fmt );
1
  • 46
    Please, don't edit your question when you get the correct answer. The answer is visible for everyone to see here, anyway. Also: if the answer is good (enough) for you, tag it as "the" answer (use the wedge symbol next to the answer you consider the correct one) in order for the poster to get the credit he/she should get for it.
    – Dirk
    Sep 14, 2010 at 13:05

3 Answers 3

96

LocalDate's toString can take a format string directly, so you can skip creating the DateTimeFormatter:

String formattedDate = myLocalDate.toString("MM/dd/yyyy");

https://www.joda.org/joda-time/apidocs/org/joda/time/LocalDate.html#toString-java.lang.String-

3
  • Does toString(string_format) create it's own DateTimeFormatter instance each time you call it? If so then methods that do a bunch of conversions would be a lot more efficient if they created their own instance and reused with by calling the formatter's print() method.
    – Rick
    Sep 16, 2015 at 18:48
  • 1
    @Rick Interestingly, internally Joda (2.3 at least) manages a thread safe pattern cache. It creates its own DateTimeFormatter instance the very first time only and reuses it on each next calls.
    – Stephan
    Apr 1, 2016 at 17:31
  • Additionally, I wouldn't spend any of my time worrying about the performance of formatting a date unless I was doing it at least thousands of times. Bigger fish to fry. Apr 1, 2016 at 20:25
42

While the answer you've found will work, I prefer to look at it the other way round, in terms of which object is "active" (in terms of formatting) and which is just providing data:

LocalDate localDate = new LocalDate(2010, 9, 14);
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("MM/dd/yyyy");
String formattedDate = formatter.print(localDate);
3
  • I can't find where DateTimeFormat is? can you please give the import statements too
    – samthebest
    Oct 11, 2016 at 14:48
  • @samthebest: Did you look in the Javadoc? Just a Google search for "joda DateTimeFormat" finds it - but if not, joda.org/joda-time/apidocs/org/joda/time/format/…
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 11, 2016 at 15:03
  • Oops, I misread the question, I thought this was for java 8 time, not joda.
    – samthebest
    Oct 12, 2016 at 15:24
6
DateTimeFormatter fmt = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("MM/dd/yyyy");
String formattedDate = jodeLocalDateObj.toString( fmt );
0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.