I'm retrieving a datetime from a SQLite DB which comes out in the format...

2011-01-24 02:45:00

In C# I can simply use DateTime.Parse("2011-01-24 02:45:00").ToString("HH:mm") in order to get the string 02:45

Is their a way I can I do this in Android/Java? My code in my Android app looks like this...

// dateStr below is logging as correctly being yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss format
String dateStr = cursor.getString(cursor.getColumnIndex("start_time"));
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm");
String shortTimeStr = sdf.format(dateStr); // <-- throws IllegalArgumentException

EDIT: Thanks to both doc_180 and Konstantin Burov - the examples given have helped me sort out the problem. Part of the issue was that I was importing java.sql.Date instead of java.util.Date. I've changed things around and it's working perfectly for me now.

link|improve this question

SimpleDateFormat needs a date arguement, not string. You should store your date as milliseconds and create a date object from that. Date d = new Date(dateAsMillisec) and then pass that to simpledateformat. – doc_180 Jan 24 '11 at 3:05
@doc_180: OK sorry, you're quite correct - probably need to rethink my question. My problem is my DB on the Android side is a 'mirror' of a PC-based app's SQLite DB which uses that long/reverse datetime format and I'd like to keep the formats the same. I tried using Date.parse(String) then sdf.format(...) but that also threw an exception. – MisterSquonk Jan 24 '11 at 3:16
Did you try my code. It works and I have checked. – doc_180 Jan 24 '11 at 3:30
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

You need to do the following.

  try {
            Date date = null;
            date = df.parse("2011-01-24 02:45:00");
            SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm");
            String shortTimeStr = sdf.format(date);
            System.out.println(shortTimeStr);
        } catch (ParseException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();  //To change body of catch statement use File | Settings | File Templates.
        }

As I mentioned in comment, you should store the time as milliseconds instead of string. Otherwise, I do not see any other way than creating a middleman object Date.

link|improve this answer
Thank you, see my EDIT at the end of my question. I think storing date as long (milliseconds) might be a way to go in the future but at the moment, I'm mirroring a PC SQLite DB created by someone else so I'm sticking with the same formats between PC/Android. – MisterSquonk Jan 24 '11 at 4:27
feedback

SimpleDateFormat.format expects Date or Calendar as argument while you're passing a String. Convert the String into Date first.

String dateStr = cursor.getString(cursor.getColumnIndex("start_time"));
SimpleDateFormat toFullDate = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
Date fullDate = toFullDate.parse(dateStr);
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm");
String shortTimeStr = sdf.format(fullDate); 

And yeah, I'd rather stored date as long in the database, so getting a Date object then would be more trivial:

Long dateMilliseconds = cursor.getLong(cursor.getColumnIndex("start_time"));
Date fullDate = new Date(dateMilliseconds);
link|improve this answer
Thank you, see my EDIT at the end of my question. I think storing date as long (milliseconds) might be a way to go in the future but at the moment, I'm mirroring a PC SQLite DB created by someone else so I'm sticking with the same formats between PC/Android. – MisterSquonk Jan 24 '11 at 4:27
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.