What is the simplest way of getting a Calendar
object from a java.time.Instant
or java.time.ZonedDateTime
?
3 Answers
Getting a Calendar
instant from ZonedDateTime
is pretty straight-forward, provided you know that there exists a GregorianCalendar#from(ZonedDateTime)
method. There was a discussion in Threeten-dev mail group, about why that method is not in Calendar
class. Not a very deep discussion though.
However, there is no direct way to convert from an Instant
to Calendar
. You've to have an intermediate state for that:
Instant instant = Instant.now();
ZonedDateTime zdt = ZonedDateTime.ofInstant(instant, ZoneId.systemDefault());
Calendar cal1 = GregorianCalendar.from(zdt);
This is probably because, as evident from the table on this oracle tutorial, an Instant
maps to Date
rather than a Calendar
. Similarly, a ZonedDateTime
maps to a Calendar
.
-
Should be noted, that if original
Instant
is itself obtained from aGregorianCalendar
, then original calendar and converted through theZonedDateTime
will not be equal (despite having same Epoch-Milli value) - becauseGregorianCutover
date will very likely be different. May 29, 2019 at 10:22
You need to get the TimeZone using the instant and then you can get a calendar.
Calendar myCalendar = GregorianCalendar.from(ZonedDateTime.ofInstant(Instant.now(), ZoneId.systemDefault()));
How about GregorianCalendar.from(ZonedDateTime.ofInstant(instant, zoneId))
?
-
Unable to obtain ZonedDateTime from TemporalAccessor: 2001-12-17T09:30:47Z of type java.time.Instant– LineOct 25, 2017 at 14:56
-
Indeed, you need to specify a ZoneId as well. I updated my answer. Oct 28, 2017 at 16:01
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance(); cal.setTimeInMillis(Instant.now().toEpochMilli());
so what is wrong with this solution?GregorianCalendar.from(zonedDateTime);
GregorianCalendar
. That's exactly the kind of thing I was looking for! I can't accept comments, though.Calendar
using that. I could one-line with the builder, but the line gets so long it's better broken off into four lines as well. Now, compared that, which I did use, to the solution that Rohit provided and you'll see what's wrong with it and why I asked.Instant
orZonedDateTime
toCalendar
by looking atGregorianCalendar
is not something crossed my mind. It's non-obvious and I didn't find it on a google search. All of which you might have realized if you had actually tried to answer the question instead of blithely, and incorrectly, assuming it was trivial.