Currently, to get milliseconds from start of 1970 in a local time zone, I do
long localMillis = dateTime.withZone(timeZone).toLocalDateTime()
.toDateTime(DateTimeZone.UTC).getMillis();
This works, but is there a simpler way to do this?
You can make this a little clearer by storing a constant LocalDateTime
referring to Jan 1, 1970, and then calculating a Duration
between that point in time (for a given time zone) and the instant that you care about, like:
private static final LocalDateTime JAN_1_1970 = new LocalDateTime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0);
...
new Duration(JAN_1_1970.toDateTime(someTimeZone), endPointInstantOrDateTime).getMillis();
Use (joda-time-2.3.jar) org.joda.time.LocalDateTime#toDateTime()#getMillis().
org.joda.time.format.DateTimeFormatter dtf = org.joda.time.format.DateTimeFormat.forPattern("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS");
org.joda.time.LocalDateTime ldt = dtf.parseLocalDateTime("2014-12-25 12:23:34.567");
System.out.println(ldt);
long delta = ldt.toDateTime().getMillis();
System.out.println(delta);
java.util.Date dt = new java.util.Date(delta);
System.out.println(dt);
getMillis
method on allReadableInstant
types is independent of theDateTime
's time zone, and always returns the number of milliseconds passed since the epoch (midnight Jan 1, 1970, UTC). Are you saying you want the number of milliseconds passed since midnight Jan 1, 1970 in a non-UTC time zone? (e.g. PST, CEST, etc). If so, why would you want this?