3
import org.joda.time.DateTimeZone;
import org.joda.time.format.DateTimeFormat;
import org.joda.time.format.DateTimeFormatter;

public class Main {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        System.out.println(
                DateTimeZone.forID("Europe/Copenhagen")
        );

        DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("HH:mm dd MM YY Z");
        System.out.println(
                formatter.parseDateTime("19:30 29 8 11 Europe/Copenhagen")
        );
    }
}

I would expect this to to parse the date in Copenhagen timezone, and yet it fails with:

Europe/Copenhagen
Exception in thread "main" java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Invalid format: "19:30 29 8 11 Europe/Copenhagen" is malformed at "Europe/Copenhagen"
    at org.joda.time.format.DateTimeFormatter.parseDateTime(DateTimeFormatter.java:683)
    at Main.main(Main.java:13)

Why?

1
  • 1
    Because the docs say: Zone: 'Z' outputs offset without a colon, 'ZZ' outputs the offset with a colon, 'ZZZ' or more outputs the zone id.
    – Michael-O
    Aug 7, 2011 at 14:56

3 Answers 3

3

Looking at the JodaTime DateTimeFormat javadocs for DateTimeFormat you should use ZZZ not Z.

Its easy to miss since the table in that doc only shows Z. Down the page a bit is this, "Zone: 'Z' outputs offset without a colon, 'ZZ' outputs the offset with a colon, 'ZZZ' or more outputs the zone id."

3
  • Trying ZZZ still throws the same exception for me: """Exception in thread "main" java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Invalid format: "19:30 29 8 11 Europe/Copenhagen" is malformed at " Europe/Copenhagen"""" Aug 8, 2011 at 11:49
  • Hrmm. I see in the doc I linked that "Zone names: Time zone names ('z') cannot be parsed.", so maybe Joda can only output the zone but not parse it?
    – Freiheit
    Aug 8, 2011 at 13:39
  • Looks like you have to do some preprocessing of the string on your own. joda-interest.219941.n2.nabble.com/… . Its possible, but not supported as of a year ago.
    – Freiheit
    Aug 8, 2011 at 14:23
2

Parsing of time zone IDs like Europe/Copenhagen was only added in Joda-Time v2.0

1

The solution I'm using, which seems to be working so far is:

public static void main(String[] args) {
    DateTimeFormatter formatterC = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("HH:mm dd M YY").withZone(DateTimeZone.forID("Europe/Copenhagen"));
    System.out.println(
        formatterC.parseDateTime("19:30 29 8 11")
    );
}
1
  • I think this is as close as you'll get. You can write a regex to parse out the time zone, / .*?\/.*? /. Then feed that into DateTimeZone.forId(strId) to validate it. Finally make a call as you did above with the rest of the format, plus the additional withZone.
    – Freiheit
    Aug 8, 2011 at 14:26

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