75

I am looking at the Date documentation and trying to figure out how I can express NOW + 5 seconds. Here's some pseudocode:

import java.util.Date
public class Main {

    public static void main(String args[]) {
         Date now = new Date();
         now.setSeconds(now.getSeconds() + 5);
    }
}
1

11 Answers 11

101

Date is almost entirely deprecated and is still there for backward compatibility reasons. If you need to set particular dates or do date arithmetic, use a Calendar:

Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance(); // gets a calendar using the default time zone and locale.
calendar.add(Calendar.SECOND, 5);
System.out.println(calendar.getTime());
7
  • 1
    Does almost entirely deprecated mean its going to break if my clients upgrade their JVM? Holy crap... this could be really bad. Why would they kill Date?!
    – Karl
    Oct 31, 2009 at 21:32
  • 6
    Very, very rarely is deprecated stuff really removed from the JRE and usually it's only done if the functionality is actively harmful. I think there is no danger that Date will be removed in any of the next few major releases. It's deprecated, because it has some severe drawbacks, but it will stay around. Oct 31, 2009 at 21:53
  • 1
    @Karl I have nothing to add to Joachim's answer. Oct 31, 2009 at 21:56
  • 10
    @Karl, as an FYI calendar.getTime() in this example returns a Date. I don't think they're deprecating Date as much as they're deprecating some of its functionality. Nov 1, 2009 at 0:21
  • 3
    @Tuntable The Joda-Time project was succeeded by the java.time classes defined in JSR 310, as were the terrible Date/Calendar classes. Ex: java.time.Instant.now().plusSeconds( 5 ) Jun 11, 2019 at 20:35
62

You can use:

now.setTime(now.getTime() + 5000);

Date.getTime() and setTime() always refer to milliseconds since January 1st 1970 12am UTC.

Joda-Time

However, I would strongly advise you to use Joda Time if you're doing anything more than the very simplest of date/time handling. It's a much more capable and friendly library than the built-in support in Java.

DateTime later = DateTime.now().plusSeconds( 5 );

java.time

Joda-Time later inspired the new java.time package built into Java 8.

5
  • 4
    As I press F5, your post populates with more and more useful information, it's magic =/ Oct 31, 2009 at 19:35
  • What about using the Calendar? Oct 31, 2009 at 19:40
  • 6
    Well I couldn't let a java.util.Date question go without mentioning Joda :)
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 31, 2009 at 19:40
  • 1
    @Nick: Calendar is a very tricky API to work with properly, and doesn't let you express the idea of "just a date" (no time) or "a local date/time" etc. Go for Joda :)
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 31, 2009 at 19:41
  • Well, to add 5 seconds to "now", expressing a date with time seems useful :) Oct 31, 2009 at 20:13
28

From the one-liner-hacky dep.:

new Date( System.currentTimeMillis() + 5000L)

As I understand it from your example, 'now' is really 'now', and "System.currentTimeMillis()' happens to represent that same 'now' concept :-)

But, yup, for everything more complicated than that the Joda time API rocks.

0
22

tl;dr

Instant             // Use modern `java.time.Instant` class to represent a moment in UTC.
.now()              // Capture the current moment in UTC.
.plusSeconds( 5 )   // Add five seconds into the future. Returns another `Instant` object per the Immutable Objects pattern.

java.time

Use the modern java.time classes that years ago supplanted the terrible Date & Calendar classes.

UTC

To work in UTC, use Instant.

Instant later = Instant.now().plusSeconds( 5 ) ;

Time zone

To work in a specific time zone, use ZonedDateTime.

ZoneId z = ZoneId.of( "America/Montreal" ) ;
ZonedDateTime later = ZonedDateTime.now( z ).pluSeconds( 5 ) ;

Duration

You can soft-code the amount and granularity of time to add. Use the Duration class.

Duration d = Duration.ofSeconds( 5 ) ;
Instant later = Instant.now().plus( d ) ;  // Soft-code the amount of time to add or subtract.

About java.time

The java.time framework is built into Java 8 and later. These classes supplant the troublesome old legacy date-time classes such as java.util.Date, Calendar, & SimpleDateFormat.

To learn more, see the Oracle Tutorial. And search Stack Overflow for many examples and explanations. Specification is JSR 310.

The Joda-Time project, now in maintenance mode, advises migration to the java.time classes.

You may exchange java.time objects directly with your database. Use a JDBC driver compliant with JDBC 4.2 or later. No need for strings, no need for java.sql.* classes. Hibernate 5 & JPA 2.2 support java.time.

Where to obtain the java.time classes?

10

As others have pointed out, in Joda it's much easier:

DateTime dt = new DateTime();
DateTime added = dt.plusSeconds(5);

I would strongly recommend you migrate to Joda. Almost any Java date-related question on SO resolves to a Joda recommendation :-) The Joda API is supposed to be the basis of the new standard Java date API (JSR310), so you'll be migrating towards a new standard.

1
  • 5
    "java.util.Date" is to "use Joda Time" as "Random is giving me repeated values" is to "don't keep creating new instances of Random" :)
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 31, 2009 at 21:35
6

Ignoring Dates and focusing on the question.

My preference is to use java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit since it adds clarity to my code.

In Java,

long now = System.currentTimeMillis();

5 seconds from now using TimeUtil is:

long nowPlus5Seconds = now + TimeUnit.SECONDS.toMillis(5);

Reference: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/TimeUnit.html

3

UPDATE: See my new Answer using java.time classes. I am leaving this Answer intact as history.


The Answer by Pascal Thivent and the Answer by Jon Skeet are both correct and good. Here's a bit of extra info.

Five Seconds = PT5S (ISO 8601)

Another way to express the idea of "five seconds later" is in a string using the standard formats defined by ISO 8601. The duration/period format has this pattern PnYnMnDTnHnMnS where the P marks the beginning and the T separates the date portion from time portion.

So five seconds is PT5S.

Joda-Time

The Joda-Time 2.8 library can both generate and parse such duration/period strings. See the Period, Duration, and Interval classes. You can add and subtract Period objects to/from DateTime objects.

Search StackOverflow for many examples and discussions. Here's one quick example.

DateTimeZone zone = DateTimeZone.forID( "America/Montreal" );
DateTime now = DateTime.now( zone );
DateTime then = now.plusSeconds( 5 );
Interval interval = new Interval( now, then );
Period period = interval.toPeriod( );

DateTime thenAgain = now.plus( period );

Dump to console.

System.out.println( "zone: " + zone );
System.out.println( "From now: " + now + " to then: " + then );
System.out.println( "interval: " + interval );
System.out.println( "period: " + period );
System.out.println( "thenAgain: " + thenAgain );

When run.

zone: America/Montreal
From now: 2015-06-15T19:38:21.242-04:00 to then: 2015-06-15T19:38:26.242-04:00
interval: 2015-06-15T19:38:21.242-04:00/2015-06-15T19:38:26.242-04:00
period: PT5S
thenAgain: 2015-06-15T19:38:26.242-04:00
2

I just found this from java docs

import java.util.Calendar;

public class Main {

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    Calendar now = Calendar.getInstance();
    System.out.println("Current time : " + now.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY) + ":"
        + now.get(Calendar.MINUTE) + ":" + now.get(Calendar.SECOND));

    now.add(Calendar.SECOND, 100);
    System.out.println("New time after adding 100 seconds : " + now.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY) + ":"
        + now.get(Calendar.MINUTE) + ":" + now.get(Calendar.SECOND));
  }
}

Is there a convention I should be aware of?

1
  • Wow. Java can be really verbose when it is correctly written. Your variable name was only three letters long!
    – Karl
    Oct 31, 2009 at 21:33
1
        String serverTimeSync = serverTimeFile.toString();
        SimpleDateFormat serverTime = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy,MM,dd,HH,mm,ss");
        Calendar c = Calendar.getInstance();
        c.setTime(serverTime.parse(serverTimeSync));
        c.add(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 15000);
        serverTimeSync = serverTime.format(c.getTime());
2
  • Can you explain your code, and discuss the value it adds beyond that of the several existing answers? Stack Overflow is intended to more than a code snippet library. Nov 25, 2016 at 8:46
  • am having a timeprofile.txt in device.iwas read thrw andriod bufferreader.and then adding a 15 seconds forgetting server time Nov 26, 2016 at 7:11
0
public class datetime {

    public String CurrentDate() {        
        java.util.Date dt = new java.util.Date();
        java.text.SimpleDateFormat sdf = new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"); 
        String currentTime = sdf.format(dt);
        return currentTime;
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        class SayHello extends TimerTask {
            datetime thisObj = new datetime();
            public void run() {
                String todaysdate = thisObj.CurrentDate();
                System.out.println(todaysdate);
            }
        }
        Timer timer = new Timer();
        timer.schedule(new SayHello(), 0, 5000); 
    }
}
0

Try This..

    Date now = new Date();
    System.out.println(now);

    Calendar c = Calendar.getInstance();
    c.setTime(now);
    c.add(Calendar.SECOND, 5);
    now = c.getTime();

    System.out.println(now);

    // Output
    Tue Jun 11 16:46:43 BDT 2019
    Tue Jun 11 16:46:48 BDT 2019
3
  • 1
    No, don't try this. Calendar and Date are almost entirely deprecated. Nowadays, the answer to this question is as trivial as LocalDateTime result = LocalDateTime.now().plusSeconds(5);. (Where "trivial" comes with the usual disclaimers: "... unless you pass some strange time zone change with these 5 seconds, yadda yadda...")
    – Marco13
    Jun 11, 2019 at 11:12
  • 1
    @Marco13 No, never use LocalDateTime to track a specific moment, as explained in its Javadoc. For a moment use ZonedDateTime, OffsetDateTime, or Instant. Ex: ZonedDateTime.now( ZoneId.systemDefault() ).plusSeconds( 5 ) Jun 11, 2019 at 16:29
  • 1
    The classes used in this Answer are terrible. So terrible that Sun, Oracle, and the JCP community gave up on them years ago with the adoption of JSR 310 defining the modern java.time classes. Suggesting these legacy classes in 2019 is poor advice. Jun 11, 2019 at 16:33

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