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This snippet of code always parses the date into the current timezone, and not into the timezone in the string being parsed.

final DateTimeFormatter df = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss 'GMT'Z yyyy");
final DateTime dateTime = df.parseDateTime("Mon Aug 24 12:36:46 GMT+1000 2009");
System.out.println("dateTime = " + dateTime);
// outputs dateTime = 2009-08-24T04:36:46.000+02:00

It outputs:

dateTime = 2009-08-24T04:36:46.000+02:00

whereas I expect:

dateTime = 2009-08-24T04:36:46.000+10:00

Any ideas what I'm doing wrong?

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1 Answer

vote up 2 vote down

OK, further Googling gave me the answer to my own question: use withOffsetParsed(), as so:

final DateTimeFormatter df = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss 'GMT'Z yyyy");
final DateTime dateTime = df.withOffsetParsed().parseDateTime("Mon Aug 24 12:36:46 GMT+1000 2009");

This works.

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