YearMonth
class
The YearMonth
class represents, well, a year and a month.
java.time
This class is part of the java.time framework built into Java 8 and later. These classes supplant the old troublesome date-time classes such as java.util.Date. See Oracle Tutorial. Much of the functionality has been back-ported to Java 6 & 7 in ThreeTen-Backport and further adapted to Android in ThreeTenABP.
Parsing a String
Use a DateTimeFormatter
to parse your input string. When the century is omitted the 21st century 20
is assumed.
String input = "0616";
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern ( "MMyy" );
YearMonth expiration = YearMonth.parse ( input , formatter );
Dump to console.
System.out.println ( "yearMonth = " + yearMonth );
yearMonth = 2016-06
Time Zone
Compare to the current YearMonth
. Determining the current year-month means getting the current date. And determining the current date requires a time zone. The Question and other Answers ignore this crucial issue. For any given moment the date varies around the globe by time zone. A few minutes after Paris is a new day while still “yesterday” in Montréal.
If omitted as an optional argument, the JVM’s current default time zone is silently implicitly applied. The current default can change at any time, even during runtime(!). Better to specify the expected/desired time zone.
ZoneId zoneId = ZoneId.of( "America/Montreal" );
YearMonth currentYearMonth = YearMonth.now( zoneId );
If your business rules happen to use UTC as the time zone, pass the handy constant ZoneOffset.UTC
as the time zone argument.
Compare
Lastly, we compare using isBefore
, isAfter
, or equals
.
Boolean expired = currentYearMonth.isAfter( expiration );
Rather than passing around strings or integers for the year and month, pass around these YearMonth
objects. You get the benefits of type safety, guaranteed valid values, and more self-documenting code.
dateformat.format(date)
returns aString
, you just need to convert that to anint
usingInteger.parseInt(...)
.