282

Continuing from Stack Overflow question Java program to get the current date without timestamp:

What is the most efficient way to get a Date object without the time? Is there any other way than these two?

// Method 1
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
Date dateWithoutTime = sdf.parse(sdf.format(new Date()));

// Method 2
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, 0);
cal.set(Calendar.MINUTE, 0);
cal.set(Calendar.SECOND, 0);
cal.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0);
dateWithoutTime = cal.getTime();

Update:

  1. I knew about Joda-Time; I am just trying to avoid additional library for such a simple (I think) task. But based on the answers so far Joda-Time seems extremely popular, so I might consider it.

  2. By efficient, I mean I want to avoid temporary object String creation as used by method 1, meanwhile method 2 seems like a hack instead of a solution.

8
  • 1
    Efficient? Do you need more efficiency than what's provided e.g., by method1? Feb 19, 2011 at 10:22
  • 2
    What do you mean by "efficient"? A date is basically a typed long, you can't really do this in less memory than that. If you mean "convenient", JODA time is the way to go.
    – millimoose
    Feb 19, 2011 at 10:46
  • 1
    I like method 2. Create a static method in an utility class and just use it. I've been this approach for years. Jan 12, 2012 at 14:57
  • 1
    Nitpicking on your "update 1": if it was "such a simple task", I guess Sun wouldn't have come to such horrendous and inefficient API, and you (and a lot of other people) wouldn't be asking that question at all ;-) Sep 4, 2013 at 22:18
  • 1
    @RobertoLinares: Why does it matter that it is "not short"? Each line is efficient. I'm certain it is much faster than method 1, which involves formatting and parsing. Sep 6, 2015 at 19:49

23 Answers 23

119

Do you absolutely have to use java.util.Date? I would thoroughly recommend that you use Joda Time or the java.time package from Java 8 instead. In particular, while Date and Calendar always represent a particular instant in time, with no such concept as "just a date", Joda Time does have a type representing this (LocalDate). Your code will be much clearer if you're able to use types which represent what you're actually trying to do.

There are many, many other reasons to use Joda Time or java.time instead of the built-in java.util types - they're generally far better APIs. You can always convert to/from a java.util.Date at the boundaries of your own code if you need to, e.g. for database interaction.

11
  • 90
    In enterprise applications we don't always have the option to add/use other libraries. I appreciate the pointer to Joda Time, but it's really not an answer to the original issue of getting the date portion using the standard Java. Thanks. Upvoting Chathuranga's answer.
    – noogrub
    Sep 17, 2013 at 17:29
  • 5
    @noogrub: Chathugranga's answer doesn't answer the original question, which is asking about how to get a Date object - that answer formats a date to a string, which isn't the same thing. Fundamentally, asking what date a Date is on is a meaningless question without more information: the time zone and the calendar system you're using.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 17, 2013 at 19:23
  • 9
    "In enterprise applications we don't always have the option to add/use other libraries". Really ? Are you suggesting you can't use 3rd party libs at all ? Mar 26, 2014 at 10:31
  • 3
    @BrianAgnew noogrub's comment seems to be related to non-tech constraints, I think
    – Jose_GD
    Sep 8, 2014 at 22:43
  • 3
    From today's perspective: "Joda-Time is the de facto standard date and time library for Java prior to Java SE 8. Users are now asked to migrate to java.time (JSR-310)."
    – Drux
    Aug 28, 2016 at 15:09
81

Here is what I used to get today's date with time set to 00:00:00:

DateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yyyy");

Date today = new Date();

Date todayWithZeroTime = formatter.parse(formatter.format(today));
2
  • 30
    In what way is this different from the already proposed "method 1" in the original question?
    – Chris
    Mar 16, 2013 at 11:39
  • Does not address what timezone this occurs in (left to arbitrary default timezone of JVM). Aug 1, 2017 at 18:08
70

You can use the DateUtils.truncate from Apache Commons library.

Example:

DateUtils.truncate(new Date(), java.util.Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH)
2
  • 6
    If you're going to add a new library, let it be Joda instead of Apache Commons.
    – Dibbeke
    May 20, 2016 at 7:08
  • 9
    +1 @Dibbeke The difference is not just that you would be adding one library instead of another. Sometimes one doesn't want to learn a whole new library just for the trivial task of truncating the time from a date. Or doesn't want to have code that mixes Date / Calendar with Joda dates using sometimes the former and sometimes the latter. Or cannot afford / justify replacing all the well-working Date / Calendar -based code with another library for such a trivial purpose. While suggesting Joda is certainly good as it is clearly superior and simply The Right Thing, sometimes real life kicks in. Jun 15, 2016 at 10:56
45

tl;dr

Is there any other way than these two?

Yes, there is: LocalDate.now

LocalDate.now( 
    ZoneId.of( "Pacific/Auckland" ) 
)

java.time

Java 8 and later comes with the new java.time package built-in. See Tutorial. Much of the java.time functionality is back-ported to Java 6 & 7 in ThreeTen-Backport and further adapted to Android in ThreeTenABP.

Similar to Joda-Time, java.time offers a LocalDate class to represent a date-only value without time-of-day and without time zone.

Note that time zone is critical to determining a particular date. At the stroke of midnight in Paris, for example, the date is still “yesterday” in Montréal.

LocalDate today = LocalDate.now( ZoneId.of( "America/Montreal" ) ) ;

By default, java.time uses the ISO 8601 standard in generating a string representation of a date or date-time value. (Another similarity with Joda-Time.) So simply call toString() to generate text like 2015-05-21.

String output = today.toString() ; 

About java.time

The java.time framework is built into Java 8 and later. These classes supplant the troublesome old legacy date-time classes such as java.util.Date, Calendar, & SimpleDateFormat.

The Joda-Time project, now in maintenance mode, advises migration to the java.time classes.

To learn more, see the Oracle Tutorial. And search Stack Overflow for many examples and explanations. Specification is JSR 310.

Where to obtain the java.time classes?

The ThreeTen-Extra project extends java.time with additional classes. This project is a proving ground for possible future additions to java.time. You may find some useful classes here such as Interval, YearWeek, YearQuarter, and more.

1
  • @ToolmakerSteve Getting the date always involves a time zone. But the trick is that if you fail to specify a time zone, your JVM’s current default time zone is automatically applied in determining the date. On top of that, the JVM’s current default time zone can change at any moment! Any code in any thread of any app within the JVM can call TimeZone.setDefault during runtime and immediately affect all other code running in that JVM. Moral of the Story: Always specify a time zone. Sep 6, 2015 at 21:38
25

The most straightforward way:

long millisInDay = 60 * 60 * 24 * 1000;
long currentTime = new Date().getTime();
long dateOnly = (currentTime / millisInDay) * millisInDay;
Date clearDate = new Date(dateOnly);
6
  • 6
    For me, this is currently: "Sat Feb 19 01:00:00 CET 2011". If you want to use that, then only with UTC. Feb 19, 2011 at 10:53
  • 5
    Isn't line 3 long dateOnly = (currentTime / millisInDay) * millisInDay; the same as writing long dateOnly = currentTime; ?
    – Chris
    Mar 16, 2013 at 11:46
  • 6
    It's not, because of integer math. Think of it more like Math.floor(currentTime / millisInDay) * millisInDay. He's effectively setting the time to 00:00:00 that way.
    – Blank
    Jun 22, 2013 at 16:11
  • 3
    This solution is probably fine for most application, but be warned the assumption that a day has 60 * 60 * 24 * 1000 is not always true. You can for instance have leap seconds in some days. Dec 20, 2015 at 13:34
  • 2
    This is arguably the most obtuse and not recommended way over other 1 and 2-line clear and concise methods. Aug 1, 2017 at 18:04
23

The standard answer to these questions is to use Joda Time. The API is better and if you're using the formatters and parsers you can avoid the non-intuitive lack of thread safety of SimpleDateFormat.

Using Joda means you can simply do:

LocalDate d = new LocalDate();

Update:: Using java 8 this can be acheived using

LocalDate date = LocalDate.now();
2
  • The new java.time package in Java 8 also offers a LocalDate class similar to Joda-Time. Jun 18, 2014 at 7:14
  • 1
    Ideally you would pass a DateTimeZone to that LocalDate constructor. Determining the current date depends on time zone, as Paris begins a new date earlier than Montréal. If you omit the time zone, your JVM's default time zone is applied. Usually better to specify than rely on default. Jun 18, 2014 at 7:17
10

This is a simple way of doing it:

Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
SimpleDateFormat dateOnly = new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy");
System.out.println(dateOnly.format(cal.getTime()));
1
  • 4
    This answer fails to address the question. Obtaining a formatted string was not the goal. Aug 27, 2014 at 6:32
7

It does not make sense to talk about a date without a timestamp with regards to the Date routines in the standard java runtime, as it essentially maps down to a specific millisecond and not a date. Said millisecond intrinsically has a time of day attached to it which makes it vulnerable to timezone problems like Daylight Savings Time and other calendar adjustments. See Why is subtracting these two times (in 1927) giving a strange result? for an interesting example.

If you want to work with dates instead of milliseconds, you need to use something else. For Java 8 there is a new set of methods providing exactly what you ask for. For Java 7 and earlier use http://www.joda.org/joda-time/

8
  • 3
    Note: Those approaches saying "the date at midnight" does not handle daylight savings time and multiple timezones well. Feb 19, 2011 at 10:38
  • I confirm it, I was incrementing dates by one day in my app, and learned about this with a bug report from users in a timezone with DST (my country does not use DST). In the day DST begins my app adds 11 hours instead of 12. Perhaps using noon as the hour for a "no time" date is better?
    – Jose_GD
    Sep 8, 2014 at 22:47
  • 1
    @Jose_GD It is at best still a hack. You might find youtube.com/watch?v=-5wpm-gesOY entertaining. Sep 8, 2014 at 23:18
  • @ Thorbjorn, you're right, just wanted to avoid JodaTime because adding a library for just one feature sound overkill for me. I knew about that video, funny indeed.
    – Jose_GD
    Sep 9, 2014 at 11:31
  • 1
    @Jose_GD The point was that there is an actual real life use case that in which your approach would be considered a bug. If you found one, there might be more... I do not know how Joda handles this, but you could have a look. Also note that Java 8 brings a new date-time library (based on the experiences with Joda) which you may want to look into. Sep 10, 2014 at 7:01
5

If all you want is to see the date like so "YYYY-MM-DD" without all the other clutter e.g. "Thu May 21 12:08:18 EDT 2015" then just use java.sql.Date. This example gets the current date:

new java.sql.Date(System.currentTimeMillis());

Also java.sql.Date is a subclass of java.util.Date.

5
// 09/28/2015
System.out.println(new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy").format(Calendar.getInstance().getTime()));

// Mon Sep 28
System.out.println( new Date().toString().substring(0, 10) );

// 2015-09-28
System.out.println(new java.sql.Date(System.currentTimeMillis()));

// 2015-09-28
// java 8
System.out.println( LocalDate.now(ZoneId.of("Europe/Paris")) ); // rest zones id in ZoneId class
4

Definitely not the most correct way, but if you just need a quick solution to get the date without the time and you do not wish to use a third party library this should do

    Date db = db.substring(0, 10) + db.substring(23,28);

I only needed the date for visual purposes and couldn't Joda so I substringed.

4

Use LocalDate.now() and convert into Date like below:

Date.from(LocalDate.now().atStartOfDay(ZoneId.systemDefault()).toInstant());
1
  • 1
    The JVM’s current default time zone can change at any moment during runtime. Any code in any thread of any app within the JVM can call TimeZone.setDefault. Your code is calling ZoneId.systemDefault twice, the first is implicit in LocalDate.now() and the second is explicit with atStartOfDay. In between those two moments at runtime, the current default zone could change. I suggest capturing the zone into a variable, and pass to both methods. Feb 28, 2018 at 20:55
3

Well, as far as I know there is no easier way to achieve this if you only use the standard JDK.

You can, of course, put that logic in method2 into a static function in a helper class, like done here in the toBeginningOfTheDay-method

Then you can shorten the second method to:

Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
Calendars.toBeginningOfTheDay(cal);
dateWithoutTime = cal.getTime();

Or, if you really need the current day in this format so often, then you can just wrap it up in another static helper method, thereby making it a one-liner.

3

What about this?

public static Date formatStrictDate(int year, int month, int dayOfMonth) {
    Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance();
    calendar.set(year, month, dayOfMonth, 0, 0, 0);
    calendar.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0);
    return calendar.getTime();
}
2

If you need the date part just for echoing purpose, then

Date d = new Date(); 
String dateWithoutTime = d.toString().substring(0, 10);
1
  • 1
    I don't think this is i18n friendly Jan 8, 2016 at 21:20
2

If you just need the current date, without time, another option is:

DateTime.now().withTimeAtStartOfDay()
1
  • 1
    The Question asked for no time-of-day. Your result is a date-time object which does indeed have a time-of-day, that time being 00:00:00 usually (may vary by time zone for anomalies such as DST). So, as other Answers note, the LocalDate class is more appropriate, from Joda-Time (assuming you are referencing Joda-Time – which you should be noting explicitly when citing classes not bundled with Java). Aug 22, 2016 at 22:42
2

Yo can use joda time.

private Date dateWitoutTime(Date date){
 return new LocalDate(date).toDate()
}

and you call with:

Date date = new Date();
System.out.println("Without Time = " + dateWitoutTime(date) + "/n  With time = " + date);
1

Check out Veyder-time. It is a simple and efficient alternative to both java.util and Joda-time. It has an intuitive API and classes that represent dates alone, without timestamps.

1

The most straigthforward way that makes full use of the huge TimeZone Database of Java and is correct:

long currentTime = new Date().getTime();
long dateOnly = currentTime + TimeZone.getDefault().getOffset(currentTime);
1

Here is a clean solution with no conversion to string and back, and also it doesn't re-calculate time several times as you reset each component of the time to zero. It also uses % (modulus) rather than divide followed by multiply to avoid the double operation.

It requires no third-party dependencies, and it RESPECTS THE TIMEZONE OF THE Calender object passed in. This function returns the moment in time at 12 AM in the timezone of the date (Calendar) you pass in.

public static Calendar date_only(Calendar datetime) {
    final long LENGTH_OF_DAY = 24*60*60*1000;
    long millis = datetime.getTimeInMillis();
    long offset = datetime.getTimeZone().getOffset(millis);
    millis = millis - ((millis + offset) % LENGTH_OF_DAY);
    datetime.setTimeInMillis(millis);
    return datetime;
}
1
  • I am not very convinced it will respect summer tme (DST)?
    – Anonymous
    Nov 29, 2017 at 6:36
0

Prefer not to use third-party libraries as much as possible. I know that this way is mentioned before, but here is a nice clean way:

  /*
    Return values:
    -1:    Date1 < Date2
     0:    Date1 == Date2
     1:    Date1 > Date2

    -2:    Error
*/
public int compareDates(Date date1, Date date2)
{
    SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("ddMMyyyy");

    try
    {
        date1 = sdf.parse(sdf.format(date1));
        date2 = sdf.parse(sdf.format(date2));
    }
    catch (ParseException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
        return -2;
    }

    Calendar cal1 = new GregorianCalendar();
    Calendar cal2 = new GregorianCalendar();

    cal1.setTime(date1);
    cal2.setTime(date2);

    if(cal1.equals(cal2))
    {
        return 0;
    }
    else if(cal1.after(cal2))
    {
        return 1;
    }
    else if(cal1.before(cal2))
    {
        return -1;
    }

    return -2;
}

Well, not using GregorianCalendar is maybe an option!

0

I just made this for my app :

public static Date getDatePart(Date dateTime) {
    TimeZone tz = TimeZone.getDefault();
    long rawOffset=tz.getRawOffset();
    long dst=(tz.inDaylightTime(dateTime)?tz.getDSTSavings():0);
    long dt=dateTime.getTime()+rawOffset+dst; // add offseet and dst to dateTime
    long modDt=dt % (60*60*24*1000) ;

    return new Date( dt
                    - modDt // substract the rest of the division by a day in milliseconds
                    - rawOffset // substract the time offset (Paris = GMT +1h for example)
                    - dst // If dayLight, substract hours (Paris = +1h in dayLight)
    );
}

Android API level 1, no external library. It respects daylight and default timeZone. No String manipulation so I think this way is more CPU efficient than yours but I haven't made any tests.

0

We can use SimpleDateFormat to format the date as we like. here is a working example below:-

SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yyyy");
System.out.println(dateFormat.format(new Date())); //data can be inserted in this format function

Output:

15/06/2021
1
  • We can also not. The SimpleDateFormat class is a notorious troublemaker of a class, so we should avoid it.
    – Anonymous
    Jun 15, 2021 at 16:12

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