16

I'm playing with date-time format from ISO 8601. I have this pattern:

"yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZZ'Z'"

and the output is:

"2015-11-17T00:00:00+0000Z"

My question is if the output is ok, if is possible to have in a date +0000 and Z taking in account both has the same meaning time zone offset/id. Thanks in advance for clarification =)

1
  • @BasilBourque I don think so needs clarification, it is clear, it asks if that date format is ok "2015-11-17T00:00:00+0000Z" =)
    – Zilev av
    Mar 8, 2016 at 12:43

1 Answer 1

32

No, not OK

No, the Z is an offset-from-UTC. So it should not be combined redundantly with a numerical offset of +00:00 or +0000.

ISO 8601

While I do not have access to a paid copy of the ISO 8601 spec, the Wikipedia page clearly states that the Z must follow the time-of-day:

…add a Z directly after the time without a space.

IETF RFC 3339

The freely-available RFC 3339, a profile of ISO 8601, defines a Z as being attached to a time-of-day:

A suffix … applied to a time …

The RFC also states with formal ABNF notation that we should use either a Z or a number. In ABNF, the slash (SOLIDUS) means “or” (exclusive ‘or’), while the pair of square brackets means “optional”.

time-numoffset = ("+" / "-") time-hour [[":"] time-minute]

time-zone = "Z" / time-numoffset

Furthermore, section 5.4 of the spec specifically recommends against including redundant information.

Java

The modern java.time classes built into Java use the standard ISO 8601 formats by default when parsing/generating strings. See Oracle Tutorial.

Parsing text input

With Z:

Instant instant = Instant.parse( "2019-01-23T12:34:56.123456789Z" ) ;

With +00:00:

OffsetDateTime odt = OffsetDateTime.parse( "2019-01-23T12:34:56.123456789+00:00" ) ;

Generating text output

To create a string with the Z, simply call Instant::toString.

String output = Instant.now().toString() ;  // Capture the current moment in UTC, then generate text representing that value in standard ISO 8601 using the `Z` offset-indicator.

2019-05-22T21:00:52.214709Z

To create a string with the 00:00, call OffsetDateTime::format. Generate text using a DateTimeFormatter with a formatting pattern you define.

DateTimeFormatter f = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern( "uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSxxx" ) ;
String output = OffsetDateTime.now( ZoneOffset.UTC ).format( f ) ;

2019-05-22T21:00:52.319076+00:00

Truncating

You may want to truncate any microseconds or nanoseconds.

Instant
.now()
.truncatedTo( ChronoUnit.MILLIS )
.toString()

2019-05-22T21:11:28.970Z

…and…

OffsetDateTime
.now( ZoneOffset.UTC )
.truncatedTo( ChronoUnit.MILLIS )
.format( 
    DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern( "uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSxxx" )
)

2019-05-22T21:11:29.078+00:00

See this code running live at IdeOne.com.

7
  • in Java: final String DATE_FORMAT_ISO_8601 = "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS'Z'"; May 22, 2019 at 15:06
  • @SomeoneSomewhere No, do not bury the Z inside a pair of single-quote marks. This turns the Z into a string literal, mere decoration, rather than a meaningful pattern code. May 22, 2019 at 15:09
  • I'm currently working on a crypto-coin project and the API spec requires the "Z" at the end, instead of the "+0000". docs.pro.coinbase.com/?javascript#time May 22, 2019 at 21:02
  • 1
    @SomeoneSomewhere Fine, but that is no reason to define a broken formatting pattern. The Z in a formatting pattern should never be inside single-quotes. I will edit the Answer to show the easy way to get the Z to appear: Instant.now().toString(). You may want to truncate any microseconds/nanoseconds: Instant.now().truncatedTo( ChronoUnit.MILLIS ).toString() May 22, 2019 at 21:06
  • 1
    @AnkitAgrawal Reread the first sentence of my Answer. The Z in a DateTimeFormatter formatting pattern is a code indicating you want to generate text representing the offset. So then appending a hard-coded +0400 is redundant, is a contradiction of the Z, and is invalid syntax. So I am not really sure what you meant to ask. And for a New York time zone (America/New_York), you would be using a time zone with a ZonedDateTime object rather than an offset. Ex: ZonedDateTime.now( ZoneId.of( "America/New_York" ) ).toString(). Jun 20, 2023 at 23:26

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