205

I am new to Java, usually work with PHP.

I am trying to convert this string:

Mon Mar 14 16:02:37 GMT 2011

Into a Calendar Object so that I can easily pull the Year and Month like this:

String yearAndMonth = cal.get(Calendar.YEAR)+cal.get(Calendar.MONTH);

Would it be a bad idea to parse it manually? Using a substring method?

Any advice would help thanks!

1

8 Answers 8

453
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss z yyyy", Locale.ENGLISH);
cal.setTime(sdf.parse("Mon Mar 14 16:02:37 GMT 2011"));// all done

note: set Locale according to your environment/requirement


See Also

3
  • onlineconversion.com/unix_time.htm. This is online timestamp converter. The value which is calculated by java code and this online convert gets differ. Why?? Can u pls go through this. Thanks :)
    – Sachin J
    Oct 5, 2012 at 9:47
  • 8
    Note that this looses the timezone information. The Calendar object will have the system default TimeZone not the parsed one. Aug 20, 2013 at 15:22
  • 1
    This should not be the top/accepted answer any more. Since Java 8 is already out for more than 4 years the answer should be updated to mention java.time. This Q/A comes up pretty prominent on google.
    – Scolytus
    Oct 4, 2018 at 10:16
26

tl;dr

The modern approach uses the java.time classes.

YearMonth.from(
    ZonedDateTime.parse( 
        "Mon Mar 14 16:02:37 GMT 2011" , 
        DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern( "E MMM d HH:mm:ss z uuuu" )
     )
).toString()

2011-03

Avoid legacy date-time classes

The modern way is with java.time classes. The old date-time classes such as Calendar have proven to be poorly-designed, confusing, and troublesome.

Define a custom formatter to match your string input.

String input = "Mon Mar 14 16:02:37 GMT 2011";
DateTimeFormatter f = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern( "E MMM d HH:mm:ss z uuuu" );

Parse as a ZonedDateTime.

ZonedDateTime zdt = ZonedDateTime.parse( input , f );

You are interested in the year and month. The java.time classes include YearMonth class for that purpose.

YearMonth ym = YearMonth.from( zdt );

You can interrogate for the year and month numbers if needed.

int year = ym.getYear();
int month = ym.getMonthValue();

But the toString method generates a string in standard ISO 8601 format.

String output = ym.toString();

Put this all together.

String input = "Mon Mar 14 16:02:37 GMT 2011";
DateTimeFormatter f = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern( "E MMM d HH:mm:ss z uuuu" );
ZonedDateTime zdt = ZonedDateTime.parse( input , f );
YearMonth ym = YearMonth.from( zdt );
int year = ym.getYear();
int month = ym.getMonthValue();

Dump to console.

System.out.println( "input: " + input );
System.out.println( "zdt: " + zdt );
System.out.println( "ym: " + ym );

input: Mon Mar 14 16:02:37 GMT 2011

zdt: 2011-03-14T16:02:37Z[GMT]

ym: 2011-03

Live code

See this code running in IdeOne.com.

Conversion

If you must have a Calendar object, you can convert to a GregorianCalendar using new methods added to the old classes.

GregorianCalendar gc = GregorianCalendar.from( zdt );

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.

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

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

You may exchange java.time objects directly with your database. Use a JDBC driver compliant with JDBC 4.2 or later. No need for strings, no need for java.sql.* classes. Hibernate 5 & JPA 2.2 support java.time.

Where to obtain the java.time classes?

1
  • Just to add to this, one can access the Day from the ZonedDateTime Object. For example: zdt.getDayOfMonth() (returns int), zdt.getDayOfYear() (returns int), or zdt.getDayOfWeek() (returns java.time.DayOfWeek).
    – OscuroAA
    Aug 4, 2022 at 1:47
14

Well, I think it would be a bad idea to replicate the code which is already present in classes like SimpleDateFormat.

On the other hand, personally I'd suggest avoiding Calendar and Date entirely if you can, and using Joda Time instead, as a far better designed date and time API. For example, you need to be aware that SimpleDateFormat is not thread-safe, so you either need thread-locals, synchronization, or a new instance each time you use it. Joda parsers and formatters are thread-safe.

6
  • Thanks for your input, I will certainly look into using Joda in the future, looks like it can be very useful Mar 14, 2011 at 16:18
  • @Jon Skeet Joda will not deserialize in Android. Joda is worth little unless you have no need to save dates and time. Feb 16, 2017 at 20:47
  • @FrankZappa: I'd disagree with that - you can do all your date/time calculations in Joda Time, but then convert to other types (maybe just strings for simplicity) for serialization purposes.
    – Jon Skeet
    Feb 16, 2017 at 22:12
  • Sorry, had to downvote, the answer is too old, it's outdated to be the highest ranking answer. Today java.time is the way to go, Basil Bourque provided an excellent answer.
    – Scolytus
    Oct 1, 2018 at 13:54
  • 2
    @Scolytus: The top (and accepted) answer has 332 votes compared with 10 on this one. I think if you go round downvoting every 7+-year-old answer that has a better solution now, you'll run out of downvotes... (I agree that Basil's answer is good, and I've upvoted that.)
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 1, 2018 at 20:59
10

No new Calendar needs to be created, SimpleDateFormat already uses a Calendar underneath.

SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss z yyyy", Locale.EN_US);
Date date = sdf.parse("Mon Mar 14 16:02:37 GMT 2011"));// all done
Calendar cal = sdf.getCalendar();

(I can't comment yet, that's why I created a new answer)

1
  • 1
    Your solution looks elegant, but has two disadvantages: 1. The JavaDoc doesn't guarantee that the behavior is, as expected. 2. At least for Java 6 you find a path at line 1353 where the calendar-object is cloned. So then then !date.equals(cal.getTime()).
    – niels
    Dec 7, 2017 at 10:52
6

SimpleDateFormat is great, just note that HH is different from hh when working with hours. HH will return 24 hour based hours and hh will return 12 hour based hours.

For example, the following will return 12 hour time:

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

While this will return 24 hour time:

SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm");
6

Parse a time with timezone, Z in pattern is for time zone

String aTime = "2017-10-25T11:39:00+09:00";
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ", Locale.getDefault());
try {
    Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
    cal.setTime(sdf.parse(aTime));
    Log.i(TAG, "time = " + cal.getTimeInMillis()); 
} catch (ParseException e) {
    e.printStackTrace();
}

Output: it will return the UTC time

1508899140000

enter image description here

If we don't set the time zone in pattern like yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss. SimpleDateFormat will use the time zone which have set in Setting

3

Yes it would be bad practice to parse it yourself. Take a look at SimpleDateFormat, it will turn the String into a Date and you can set the Date into a Calendar instance.

1

Simple method:

public Calendar stringToCalendar(String date, String pattern) throws ParseException {
    String DEFAULT_LOCALE_NAME = "pt";
    String DEFAULT_COUNTRY = "BR";
    Locale DEFAULT_LOCALE = new Locale(DEFAULT_LOCALE_NAME, DEFAULT_COUNTRY);
    SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat(pattern, LocaleUtils.DEFAULT_LOCALE);
    Date d = format.parse(date);
    Calendar c = getCalendar();
    c.setTime(d);
    return c;
}

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