15

I'm trying to use SimpleDateFormat of Java to parse a String to date with the following code.

public class DateTester {

    public static void main(String[] args) throws ParseException {
        String dateString = "2011-02-28";

        SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("MM-dd-yyyy");

        System.out.println(dateFormat.parse(dateString));
    }
}

I was expecting some parse error. But interestingly, it prints the following String.

Wed Jul 02 00:00:00 IST 195

Couldn't reason it out. Can anyone help?

Thanks

0

3 Answers 3

23

By default, SimpleDateFormat is lenient, so to get it to fail, you need to do:

dateFormat.setLenient( false ) ;

before parsing the date. You will then get the exception:

java.text.ParseException: Unparseable date: "2011-02-28"
3
  • 1
    @RMT it doesn't answer the question. Nothing wrong with the content of the answer - quite useful info (thx @tim) - but the question was "why that output", not "how to fix"
    – Bohemian
    Aug 1, 2011 at 14:00
  • 2
    Actually he wanted to know, "why there is that output instead of an exception". So the reason for this is, setLenient is set to true, instead of false. For a perfect answer you should stick both of your answers together! ;).
    – crusam
    Aug 1, 2011 at 14:47
  • 1
    My actual question was answered by @Bohemian , but this one also gives very valuable information. So, +1 for this.
    – Ramesh
    Aug 2, 2011 at 7:00
22

SimpleDateFormat has parsed 2011 as month number 2011, because month (MM) is the first part of the date pattern.

If you add 2011 months to year 28, you get year 195.

2011 months is 167 years and 7 months. July is the 7th month. You specified 02 as the day, 28 as the year, 28 + 167 = 195, so 02 July 195 is correct.

1
  • +1 for explaining why output is: Wed Jul 02 00:00:00 IST 195
    – Harry Joy
    Aug 1, 2011 at 13:30
5

Call setLenient(false) on the dateFormat. Then you'll get your parse exception, like this:

groovy:000> df = new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("MM-dd-yyyy")
===> java.text.SimpleDateFormat@ac880840
groovy:000> df.setLenient(false)
===> null
groovy:000> df.parse("2011-02-28")
ERROR java.text.ParseException:
Unparseable date: "2011-02-28"
        at java_text_DateFormat$parse.call (Unknown Source)
        at groovysh_evaluate.run (groovysh_evaluate:2)
        ...

Bohemian is right, if you don't set the lenient property then the JDK will bend over backwards making sense of the garbage it's given:

groovy:000> df = new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("MM-dd-yyyy");
===> java.text.SimpleDateFormat@ac880840
groovy:000> df.parse("13-01-2011")
===> Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2012
groovy:000> df.setLenient(false)
===> null
groovy:000> df.parse("13-01-2011")
ERROR java.text.ParseException:
Unparseable date: "13-01-2011"
        at java_text_DateFormat$parse.call (Unknown Source)
        at groovysh_evaluate.run (groovysh_evaluate:2)
        ...
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  • 4
    hes not asking how to fix it, he's asking why is prints that out and not a parse exception
    – RMT
    Aug 1, 2011 at 13:26
  • 1
    @RMT: yes, I know, I edited my answer to acknowledge that, then changed it to answer his question. Aug 1, 2011 at 13:31

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