tl;dr
String output = ZonedDateTime.ofInstant ( Instant.ofEpochSecond ( 1_468_015_200L ) , ZoneId.of ( "Europe/Paris" ) ).toString();
Details
A few issues:
- You are not using proper time zone names.
- Proper names are in
continent/region
format.
- The 3-4 letter abbreviations so commonly seen in the media such as
CEST
are not true time zones. Avoid them. They are neither standardized nor unique(!).
- You are using old outmoded date-time classes that are poorly designed and confusing. They have been supplanted by the java.time framework.
If by CEST
you meant 2 hours ahead of UTC in the summer, then let's take Europe/Paris
as an example time zone. Your Question lacks example data, so I'll make up this example.
Apparently your input is a count of whole seconds from the epoch of first moment of 1970 in UTC. That value can be used directly, no need to multiply.
The ZoneId
class represents the time zone. An Instant
is a point on the timeline in UTC with a resolution up to nanoseconds. A ZonedDateTime
is the Instant
adjusted into the ZoneId
.
ZoneId zoneId = ZoneId.of ( "Europe/Paris" );
long input = 1_468_015_200L; // Whole seconds since start of 1970.
Instant instant = Instant.ofEpochSecond ( input );
ZonedDateTime zdt = ZonedDateTime.ofInstant ( instant , zoneId );
Dump to console.
System.out.println ( "input: " + input + " | instant: " + instant + " | zdt: " + zdt );
input: 1468015200 | instant: 2016-07-08T22:00:00Z | zdt: 2016-07-09T00:00+02:00[Europe/Paris]