You do too much when trying to convert to old java.util.Date
. And then you implicitly use its method toString()
which should be well known for the observed behaviour to print the instant always in your system timezone.
But printing in UTC timezone is extremely simple, not even a formatter is needed if you can cope with ISO-8601-notation:
ZonedDateTime utc = ZonedDateTime.now(ZoneOffset.UTC);
System.out.println("DATETIME = " + utc.toInstant());
// output: DATETIME = 2015-12-30T15:01:18.483Z (Instant is always printed with UTC offset)
System.out.println("DATETIME = " + utc);
// output: DATETIME = 2015-12-30T15:01:57.611Z (the same because you
// have explicitly set the UTC Offset when constructing the ZonedDateTime)
You see, the behaviour of toString()
of the new Java-8 classes Instant
and ZonedDateTime
is much clearer and is always in ISO-format. No need for a confusing conversion to Date
.
About specialized formatters, you will only need one if you intend to deviate from ISO-8601-format - maybe using localized month names or extra printing of weekdays etc. Example in US-style:
System.out.println(
"DATETIME = "
+ utc.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MM/dd/uuuu h:mm:ss a xxx")));
// output: DATETIME = 12/30/2015 3:14:50 PM +00:00
Note that the answer of @LowLevel uses a wrong pattern. If you leave out the symbol a (AM/PM-marker) then you should not choose the half-day-hour-symbol h but H (24-hour-format). And the timezone or offset symbol (here x) is crucial because otherwise the printed datetime will not be automatically recognized as being in UTC timezone.
toString
method do it for you!Date#toString()
method which uses the system time zone (which the operating system is using), when it is displayed, notDate
itself. It by default and always takesUTC
. So, if you persist aDate
instance to an underlying database, it should be according toUTC
. Those answers merely say how to display Date Time, for example, on the Java console which do not take into account that you need to persist aDate
instance into a database (where the Java 8DataTime
is not supported as of now).