vote up 1 vote down star

I'm really scratching my head on this one. I've been using SimpleDateFormats with no troubles for a while, but now, using a SimpleDateFormat to parse dates is (only sometimes) just plain wrong.

Specifically:

SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss");
Date date = sdf.parse("2009-08-19 12:00:00");
System.out.print(date.toString());

prints the string Wed Aug 19 00:00:00 EDT 2009. What the heck? - it doesn't even parse into the wrong date all the time!


Update: That fixed it beautifully. Wouldn't you know it, that was misused in a few other places as well. Gotta love debugging other people's code :)

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I wish people would stop calling things “bizarre” and “weird” whenever they make mistakes. :/ – Bombe Aug 22 at 1:57
Sorry. I was debugging code that someone many many years my senior had written, and I expected to be able to trust. – Bears will eat you Aug 24 at 15:35

3 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

I think you want to use the HH format, rather than 'hh' so that you are using hours between 00-23. 'hh' takes the format in 12 hour increments, and so it assumes it is in the AM.

So this

SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
Date date = sdf.parse("2009-08-19 12:00:00");
System.out.print(date.toString());

Should print out

Wed Aug 19 12:00:00 EDT 2009

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vote up 2 vote down

You're printing out the toString() representation of the date, rather than the format's representation. You may also want to check the hour representation. H and h mean something different. H is for the 24 hour clock (0-23), h is for the 12 hour clock (1-12), (there is also k and K for 1-24 and 0-11 based times respectively)

You need to do something like:

//in reality obtain the date from elsewhere, e.g. new Date()
Date date = sdf.parse("2009-08-19 12:00:00"); 

//this format uses 12 hours for time
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss");
//this format uses 24 hours for time
SimpleDateFormat sdf2 = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");

System.out.print(sdf.format(date));
System.out.print(sdf2.format(date));
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I'll try that, but I don't think it's going to solve the problem. In my application, I'm not actually converting back to a string. I'm saving the Date to a database, and it's wrong there, too. – Bears will eat you Aug 21 at 17:44
Are your format strings consistent? Some DBMSs will automatically convert values if they can figure things out, some won't. Are the problematic values in a column(s) with different formatting applied at the db level? Or coming from a connection that's got different parameters set? – DaveE Aug 21 at 18:03
vote up 2 vote down

The hour should be specified as HH instead of hh. Check out the section on Date and Time patterns in http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html

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