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How can you calculate the number of weeks between two dates in Android? I have done something like this

int week1 = calendar1.get(Calendar.WEEK_OF_YEAR);
int week2 = calendar2.get(Calendar.WEEK_OF_YEAR);
int calendarWeekDifference = week2 - week1;

However this does not work when the two dates are in different years. How can I achieve a solution so that it will work across different years?

EDIT

I have tried doing the following with Joda-Time:

public static int weeksTouched(Calendar fromDate, Calendar toDate){
    DateTime fromDateTime = new DateTime(fromDate);
    DateTime toDateTime = new DateTime(toDate);
    DateTime epoch = new DateTime(0);
    Weeks fromWeeks = Weeks.weeksBetween(epoch, fromDateTime);
    Weeks toWeeks = Weeks.weeksBetween(epoch, toDateTime);
    int betweenWeeks = toWeeks.getWeeks() - fromWeeks.getWeeks();
    return betweenWeeks;
}

This almost works but for some reason it thinks the start of a week is Thursday. I want the start of a week to be Monday so that a Monday to the next Saturday would return 0 (same week) but a Saturday to the next day Sunday would return 1 (different weeks).

4
  • 1
    Saturday to Sunday is 1 day but different week, so is that 1 week? Sunday to Saturday are 6 days apart but same week, so is that 0 weeks?
    – Andreas
    Dec 18, 2016 at 17:22
  • @Andreas That is correct
    – Dandydon
    Dec 18, 2016 at 17:23
  • If adding a Third Party Library is not a problem, you can accomplish this with JodaTime. Check out this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/24265259/4872155 Dec 19, 2016 at 11:09
  • just get the number of days between two dates and then divide it by 7. and check for remainder if there is add +1 to the quotient Dec 19, 2016 at 12:44

8 Answers 8

1
public int getWeekDifference(long fromDateInMills, long toDateInMills) {

    int weeks = Weeks.weeksBetween(new DateTime(fromDateInMills), new DateTime(toDateInMills)).getWeeks();

    // when we select any future date than week difference comes in negative so
    // just interchange millisecond You will get week difference in positive
    if (weeks < 0) {
        weeks = Weeks.weeksBetween(new DateTime(toDateInMills), new DateTime(fromDateInMills)).getWeeks();
    }

    return weeks;

}
1
  • // In your code just add this line you will get the week difference int weeks = Weeks.weeksBetween(fromDateTime, toDateTime).getWeeks(); Feb 14, 2017 at 9:32
1

Some answers here give wrong results, and some require an extra library. I managed to come up with a method that calculates the week-diff using standard Calendar APIs.

It correctly handles edge cases like 2000-01-01 to 2000-12-31 (54 weeks implies a difference of 53).

getWeeksBetween() using Calendar API

public static int getWeeksBetween(final Date start, final Date end) {
    final Calendar c1 = Calendar.getInstance(Locale.US);
    final Calendar c2 = Calendar.getInstance(Locale.US);

    // Skip time part! Not sure if this is needed, but I wanted clean dates.
    CalendarUtils.setDateWithNoTime(c1, start);
    CalendarUtils.setDateWithNoTime(c2, end);

    CalendarUtils.goToFirstDayOfWeek(c1);
    CalendarUtils.goToFirstDayOfWeek(c2);

    int weeks = 0;
    while (c1.compareTo(c2) < 0) {
        c1.add(Calendar.WEEK_OF_YEAR, 1);
        weeks++;
    }

    return weeks;
}

And some helper methods:

public static int goToFirstDayOfWeek(final Calendar calendar) {
    final int firstDayOfWeek = calendar.getFirstDayOfWeek();
    calendar.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK, firstDayOfWeek);

    return firstDayOfWeek;
}

public static void setDateWithNoTime(final Calendar calendar, final Date date) {
    calendar.setTime(date);
    clearTime(calendar);
}

public static void clearTime(final Calendar calendar) {
    calendar.set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, 0);
    calendar.set(Calendar.MINUTE, 0);
    calendar.set(Calendar.SECOND, 0);
    calendar.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0);
}
0

Without using JodaTime, I came up with this solution to calculate number of weeks:

private fun calculateNumberOfWeeks() {
    val calendarFrom = Calendar.getInstance()
    calendarFrom.set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, 0)
    calendarFrom.set(Calendar.MINUTE, 0)
    calendarFrom.set(Calendar.SECOND, 0)
    calendarFrom.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0)

    val calendarTo = Calendar.getInstance()
    calendarTo.add(Calendar.MONTH, months)
    calendarTo.set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, 0)
    calendarTo.set(Calendar.MINUTE, 0)
    calendarTo.set(Calendar.SECOND, 0)
    calendarTo.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0)

    var weeks = -1
    while (calendarFrom.timeInMillis < calendarTo.timeInMillis) {
        calendarFrom.add(Calendar.DATE, 7)
        weeks++
        Log.d(Constants.LOG_TAG, "weeks $weeks")
    }
}
0

I would recommend that instead of calculating the difference in weeks you should try to find the difference in days and the result you can divide by 7.

So it would be weeks = (daysBetweenDates / 7)

0

using java 8

public void weeks_between_two_dates_in_java_with_java8 () {

    LocalDate startDate = LocalDate.of(2005, Month.JANUARY, 1);
    LocalDate endDate = LocalDate.of(2006, Month.JANUARY, 1);

    long weeksInYear = ChronoUnit.WEEKS.between(startDate, endDate);

   }

or using joda time api

public void weeks_between_two_dates_in_java_with_joda () {

    DateTime start = new DateTime(2005, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0);
    DateTime end = new DateTime(2006, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0);

    Weeks weeks = Weeks.weeksBetween(start, end);

    int weeksInYear = weeks.getWeeks();

    }
0

What about a sort of low tech solution just using maths?

You have the Week_OF_YEAR from each date. Also the the YEAR number for each. Multiply each Year number by 52, add that to the WEEK_OF_YEAR then subtract the two numbers. for example.... 2018 Week 50 to 2019 Week 2

2018*52 = 104936 + 50 weeks = 104986
2019*52 = 104988 + 2 weeks = 104990

104990 - 104986 = 4 weeks

0

Another alternative solution. My basic concept is:

  1. Trim given dates to the respective Mondays 00:00:00.000
  2. Calculate milliseconds between those trimmed dates and then divide it by milliseconds of a week.

A sample in Java:

public class Main {
    
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Calendar Monday = Calendar.getInstance();
        Monday.set(2020, 11, 28, 12, 34, 56); // 2020-12-28T12:34:56
        Calendar Saturday = Calendar.getInstance();
        Saturday.set(2021, 0, 2, 21, 43, 57); // 2021-01-02T21:43:57
        Calendar Sunday = Calendar.getInstance();
        Sunday.set(2021, 0, 3, 0, 1, 2); // 2021-01-03T00:01:02
        Calendar NextMonday = Calendar.getInstance();
        NextMonday.set(2021, 0, 4, 1, 23, 45); // 2021-01-04T01:23:45
        
        System.out.println(String.format(": %d week(s)", weeksTouched(Monday, Sunday)));
        System.out.println(String.format(": %d week(s)", weeksTouched(Saturday, Sunday)));
        System.out.println(String.format(": %d week(s)", weeksTouched(Sunday, NextMonday)));
    }
    
    public static int weeksTouched(Calendar fromDate, Calendar toDate){
        System.out.print(String.format("%s -> %s", fromDate.getTime(), toDate.getTime()));
        return (int) (
                (trimToMonday(toDate).getTimeInMillis() - trimToMonday(fromDate).getTimeInMillis())
                / (1000 * 60 * 60 * 24 * 7)
                );
    }
    
    private static Calendar trimToMonday(Calendar input) {
        Calendar output = (Calendar) input.clone();
        
        switch (output.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)) {
        case Calendar.TUESDAY:
            output.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, -1);
            break;
        case Calendar.WEDNESDAY:
            output.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, -2);
            break;
        case Calendar.THURSDAY:
            output.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, -3);
            break;
        case Calendar.FRIDAY:
            output.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, -4);
            break;
        case Calendar.SATURDAY:
            output.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, -5);
            break;
        case Calendar.SUNDAY:
            output.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, -6);
            break;
        }
        
        output.set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, 0);
        output.set(Calendar.MINUTE, 0);
        output.set(Calendar.SECOND, 0);
        output.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0);
        
        return output;
    }
}

Output:

Mon Dec 28 12:34:56 JST 2020 -> Sun Jan 03 00:01:02 JST 2021: 0 week(s)
Sat Jan 02 21:43:57 JST 2021 -> Sun Jan 03 00:01:02 JST 2021: 0 week(s)
Sun Jan 03 00:01:02 JST 2021 -> Mon Jan 04 01:23:45 JST 2021: 1 week(s)
-1

This will give you number of weeks b/w two dates.

  public void getNoOfWeek()
    {

        Calendar date1 = Calendar.getInstance();
        Calendar date2 = Calendar.getInstance();

        date1.clear();
        date1.set(2015, 12, 29); // set date 1 (yyyy,mm,dd)
        date2.clear();
        date2.set(2016, 02, 7); //set date 2 (yyyy,mm,dd)

        long diff = date2.getTimeInMillis() - date1.getTimeInMillis();

        float dayCount = (float) diff / (24 * 60 * 60 * 1000);

        int week = (int) (dayCount / 7);
        System.out.println(week);
    }

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