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I have problem with java Date type. Why in my code days and days1 both equall 88?

GregorianCalendar dateNow = new GregorianCalendar(2014,03,31);
GregorianCalendar dateFirstDay = new GregorianCalendar(2014,01,01);
long diffInMillies = dateNow. getTimeInMillis() - dateFirstDay. getTimeInMillis();
int days = (int) (diffInMillies / (1000*60*60*24));

GregorianCalendar dateNow1 = new GregorianCalendar(2014,04,01);
GregorianCalendar dateFirstDay1 = new GregorianCalendar(2014,01,01);
long diffInMillies1 = dateNow1. getTimeInMillis() - dateFirstDay1. getTimeInMillis();
int days1 = (int) (diffInMillies1 / (1000*60*60*24));
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  • 1
    (As an aside, you realize you're finding the difference between "April 31st" and February 1st, right? Months are 0-based in Calendar...)
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 7, 2015 at 14:22

2 Answers 2

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The reason is that you are giving dateNow a month of 03, which means it is taking it as April, since it starts the month from 0. 0=Jan;1=Feb etc. Now, you are giving day of month as 31. Since April only has 30 days, it is incrementing and treating the date as 1 May, which is same as your dateNow1.

Hence the same values.

Hope this helps.

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It's the expected behavior, infact:

GregorianCalendar dateNow = new GregorianCalendar(2014,03,31);

represents the same date as

GregorianCalendar dateNow1 = new GregorianCalendar(2014,04,01);

This is because months count start from 0, so 03 is April and not March. Visit Official GregorianCalendar JavaDoc for more info on constructors usage and other.

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  • Is day's zero based too? Sep 7, 2015 at 14:32
  • No, DAY_OF_MONTH starts from 1
    – RickyGo
    Sep 7, 2015 at 14:35

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