58

I want current time in millis and then to store it in 12 hour format but with this piece of code I am getting 24 hour format time.

long timeInMillis = System.currentTimeMillis();
Calendar cal1 = Calendar.getInstance();
cal1.setTimeInMillis(timeInMillis);
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/mm/yyyy HH:mm:ss a");
dateforrow = dateFormat.format(cal1.getTime());

can anybody suggest modifications to get the desired results?

2
  • 4
    (First place to look is the API. Also, try to summarize the issue in the title better: it makes a big first impression.)
    – user166390
    Dec 27, 2012 at 10:28
  • 1
    For new readers to this question I recommend you don’t use SimpleDateFormat and Calendar. Those classes are poorly designed and long outdated, the former in particular notoriously troublesome. Instead use LocalDateTime and DateTimeFormatter, both from java.time, the modern Java date and time API. See the last part of the answer by Arvind Kumar Avinash (may also use ZonedDateTime or OffsetDateTime).
    – Anonymous
    Jun 14, 2021 at 17:47

10 Answers 10

154

Change HH to hh as

long timeInMillis = System.currentTimeMillis();
Calendar cal1 = Calendar.getInstance();
cal1.setTimeInMillis(timeInMillis);
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat(
                                "dd/MM/yyyy hh:mm:ss a");
dateforrow = dateFormat.format(cal1.getTime());

Note that dd/mm/yyyy - will give you minutes instead of the month.

2
  • What is the last "a" for ? Dec 10, 2020 at 0:26
  • 2
    @DiegoRamos It's for AM or PM Jun 9, 2021 at 19:08
54

Referring to SimpleDataFormat JavaDoc:

Letter | Date or Time Component | Presentation | Examples
---------------------------------------------------------
   H   |  Hour in day (0-23)    |    Number    |    0
   h   |  Hour in am/pm (1-12)  |    Number    |    12
1
  • private String getCurrentTimeStamp() { SimpleDateFormat timestamp = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyyMMddHHmmss"); return timestamp.format(new Date()); } . this will give your 24 hrs fomrat..... in case of yyyyMMddhhmmss will return 12 hr format. Feb 9, 2018 at 9:17
7

I re-encounter this in the hard way as well. H vs h, for 24-hour vs 12 hour !

6

Yep, confirmed that simply using "hh" instead of "HH" fixed my issue, Since "hh" is for 12-Hour Format & "HH" is for 24-Hour Format.

Changed from this:

SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm aa");

To this:

SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("hh:mm aa");

You can still use "HH" to store the time if you don't want to bother storing and dealing with the AM/PM. Then when you retrieve it, use "hh".

3

Hi I tested below code that worked fine :

    long timeInMillis = System.currentTimeMillis();
    Calendar cal1 = Calendar.getInstance();
    cal1.setTimeInMillis(timeInMillis);
    SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/mm/yyyy hh:mm:ss a");
    dateFormat.format(cal1.getTime());
2

There are three major problems with your code:

  1. Using m [Minute in hour] at the place of M [Month in year].
  2. Using H [Hour in day (0-23)] instead of h [Hour in am/pm (1-12)]. Check the documentation to learn more about these two points.
  3. Not using Locale with SimpleDateFormat. Check Never use SimpleDateFormat or DateTimeFormatter without a Locale to learn more about it.

So, the instantiation with the correct format would be:

SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yyyy hh:mm:ss a", Locale.ENGLISH);

java.time

Note that the java.util Date-Time API and their formatting API, SimpleDateFormat are outdated and error-prone. It is recommended to stop using them completely and switch to the modern Date-Time API*, released in March 2014 as part of Java SE 8 standard library.

Solution using java.time, the modern Date-Time API:

import java.time.OffsetDateTime;
import java.time.ZoneOffset;
import java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter;
import java.util.Locale;

public class Main {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        OffsetDateTime odt = OffsetDateTime.now(ZoneOffset.UTC);
        DateTimeFormatter dtf = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("dd/MM/uuuu hh:mm:ss a", Locale.ENGLISH);
        String formatted = dtf.format(odt);
        System.out.println(formatted);
    }
}    

Here, you can use y instead of u but I prefer u to y.

ONLINE DEMO

Learn more about the modern Date-Time API from Trail: Date Time.


* For any reason, if you have to stick to Java 6 or Java 7, you can use ThreeTen-Backport which backports most of the java.time functionality to Java 6 & 7. If you are working for an Android project and your Android API level is still not compliant with Java-8, check Java 8+ APIs available through desugaring and How to use ThreeTenABP in Android Project.

1

You can try it like this

  Calendar c= Calendar.getInstance();

  SimpleDateFormat sdf= new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yyyy hh:mm:ss a");
  String str=sdf.format(c.getTime());
0
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/mm/yyyy hh:mm:ss a");

use hh in place of HH

0

Simply follow the code

public static String getFormatedDate(String strDate,StringsourceFormate,
                                     String destinyFormate) {
    SimpleDateFormat df;
    df = new SimpleDateFormat(sourceFormate);
    Date date = null;
    try {
        date = df.parse(strDate);

    } catch (ParseException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }

    df = new SimpleDateFormat(destinyFormate);
    return df.format(date);

}

and pass the value into the function like that,

getFormatedDate("21:30:00", "HH:mm", "hh:mm aa");

or checkout this documentation SimpleDateFormat for StringsourceFormate and destinyFormate.

-1

See code example below:

SimpleDateFormat df = new SimpleDateFormat("hh:mm");
String formattedDate = df.format(new Date());
out.println(formattedDate);

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