tl;dr
I want to compare just days, month and years.
mydate 2013-08-23
current date: Thu Aug 23 14:15:34 CEST 2013
If you want to capture the current date dynamically.
LocalDate.now( // Capture the current date…
ZoneId.of( "Europe/Paris" ) // …as seen by the wall-clock time used by the people of a particular region (a time zone).
)
.isEqual(
LocalDate.parse( "2013-08-23" )
)
Or, for a specific moment.
ZonedDateTime.of( // Thu Aug 23 14:15:34 CEST 2013
2013 , 8 , 23 , 14 , 15 , 34 , 0 , ZoneId.of( "Europe/Paris" )
)
.toLocalDate() // Extract the date only, leaving behind the time-of-day and the time zone.
.isEqual(
LocalDate.parse( "2013-08-23" )
)
LocalDate
The bundled java.util.Date and .Calendar classes are notoriously troublesome. Avoid them. As other answers suggested, use a decent date-time libary. That means either:
You need to extract a date-only value from your date-time, to ignore the time-of-day. Both Joda-Time and java.time have such a class, coincidentally named LocalDate
.
java.time
The java.time framework built into Java 8 and later supplants the old java.util.Date/.Calendar classes. The new classes are inspired by the highly successful Joda-Time framework, intended as its successor, similar in concept but re-architected. Defined by JSR 310. Extended by the ThreeTen-Extra project. See the Tutorial.
ZoneId zoneId = ZoneId.of( "Europe/Paris" );
ZonedDateTime x = ZonedDateTime.of( 2014, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, zoneId );
ZonedDateTime y = ZonedDateTime.now( zoneId );
Extract and compare the date-only portion of the date-time by calling toLocalDate
.
Boolean isSameDate = x.toLocalDate().isEqual( y.toLocalDate() );
Joda-Time
DateTimeZone timeZoneParis = DateTimeZone.forID( "Europe/Paris" );
DateTime x = new DateTime( 2014, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, timeZoneParis );
DateTime y = new DateTime( 2014, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, timeZoneParis );
boolean isXAfterY = x.isAfter( y );
To test equality of the date portion, convert the DateTime objects to a LocalDate
which describes only a date without any time-of-day or time zone (other than a time zone used to decide the date).
boolean isSameDate = x.toLocalDate().isEqual( y.toLocalDate() );
If you want to examine the constituent elements, Joda-Time offers methods such as dayOfMonth, hourOfDay, and more.
Calendar
and then set the hours/minutes/seconds to zero.java.sql.Date
comes first in autocomplete