How can I get the current time and date in an Android app?
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543 answers! While many of them were good when they were written, the good answer to use in 2018 is here. – Ole V.V. Sep 26 '18 at 12:11
You could use:
import java.util.Calendar
Date currentTime = Calendar.getInstance().getTime();
There are plenty of constants in Calendar for everything you need.
Edit:
Check Calendar class documentation
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14+1 This was very helpful. Being new it's all these little tidbits we need ... I'm using Calendar to get the Julian date. Much easier than getting milliseconds and figuring out if the value equals today ;) – Bill Mote Apr 6 '11 at 14:50
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9But where does this pull the date and time from? the android device setting itself? – Kyle Clegg May 17 '12 at 20:29
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12@Kyle Yes, it's based on the device time settings/timezone. Quote from the doc: "Calendar's getInstance method returns a calendar whose locale is based on system settings and whose time fields have been initialized with the current date and time" - (above the first samplecode line in the class documentation). – user658042 May 20 '12 at 12:21
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3
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45As @adamdport says, this doesn't actually answer the question...
Calendar.getInstance().getTime()
orCalendar.getInstance().getTimeInMillis()
will work. – akousmata May 11 '15 at 13:23
You can (but no longer should - see below!) use android.text.format.Time:
Time now = new Time();
now.setToNow();
From the reference linked above:
The Time class is a faster replacement for the java.util.Calendar and java.util.GregorianCalendar classes. An instance of the Time class represents a moment in time, specified with second precision.
NOTE 1: It's been several years since I wrote this answer, and it is about an old, Android-specific and now deprecated class. Google now says that "[t]his class has a number of issues and it is recommended that GregorianCalendar is used instead".
NOTE 2: Even though the Time
class has a toMillis(ignoreDaylightSavings)
method, this is merely a convenience to pass to methods that expect time in milliseconds. The time value is only precise to one second; the milliseconds portion is always 000
. If in a loop you do
Time time = new Time(); time.setToNow();
Log.d("TIME TEST", Long.toString(time.toMillis(false)));
... do something that takes more than one millisecond, but less than one second ...
The resulting sequence will repeat the same value, such as 1410543204000
, until the next second has started, at which time 1410543205000
will begin to repeat.
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2@InsanityOnABun and Muhammad Babar. No, no, no. Docs say "specified with second precision" Even the simplest test (getting current time in a loop, toMillis, and logging/printing the result) would have showed you that the resulting time has 000 as the millisecond part! – ToolmakerSteve Sep 12 '14 at 17:34
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3@IgorZelaya If you want millisecond accuracy, you are probably doing interval timing, rather than time of day. Android docs recommend
SystemClock.uptimeMillis()
for interval timing. Since that is what most built-in functions use, there is strong motivation for it to be well-implemented on all devices. See discussion in SystemClock... If you want to correlate that with time of day, in app's onResume, read both this, and Time/setToNow/toMillis. Remember the difference between those. – ToolmakerSteve Sep 12 '14 at 19:08 -
Do not use the Time class. It's going to be removed in the future and has many issues with it. – Sandy Chapman Oct 21 '14 at 14:30
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1
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Actually,
GregorianCalendar
was supplanted years ago in Java and in later Android by the java.time classes, specificallyZonedDateTime
. For earlier Android, see the ThreeTen-Backport and ThreeTenABP projects. – Basil Bourque May 2 '18 at 18:20
If you want to get the date and time in a specific pattern you can use the following:
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyyMMdd_HHmmss", Locale.getDefault());
String currentDateandTime = sdf.format(new Date());
Or,
Date:
String currentDate = new SimpleDateFormat("dd-MM-yyyy", Locale.getDefault()).format(new Date());
Time:
String currentTime = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm:ss", Locale.getDefault()).format(new Date());
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This will give the time in UTC, should adopt to timezones. – Andras Balázs Lajtha Apr 21 '12 at 5:25
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10Beware, SimpleDateFormat can be problematic if performance is an issue. In my app I had a custom view that had about 20 HH:MM labels that represented specific times (long integers holding milliseconds), and an equal number of drawable resources. Initial testing showed the interaction was not as fluid as I wanted. When I profiled onDraw() I found that the SimpleTimeFormatter calls were taking 80% of the time. In fact, I'm reading this page as part of a search for a more efficient formatter and to learn more about Calendars, etc. – William T. Mallard Jul 22 '13 at 5:15
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3Yes, but no longer. I didn't realize the overhead involved and had assumed that it was pretty much a POJO. – William T. Mallard Jan 8 '14 at 16:49
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34In short:
String currentDateandTime = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss").format(new Date());
– Pratik Butani Mar 7 '14 at 12:02 -
4
For those who might rather prefer a customized format, you can use:
DateFormat df = new SimpleDateFormat("EEE, d MMM yyyy, HH:mm");
String date = df.format(Calendar.getInstance().getTime());
Whereas you can have DateFormat patterns such as:
"yyyy.MM.dd G 'at' HH:mm:ss z" ---- 2001.07.04 AD at 12:08:56 PDT
"hh 'o''clock' a, zzzz" ----------- 12 o'clock PM, Pacific Daylight Time
"EEE, d MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss Z"------- Wed, 4 Jul 2001 12:08:56 -0700
"yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"------- 2001-07-04T12:08:56.235-0700
"yyMMddHHmmssZ"-------------------- 010704120856-0700
"K:mm a, z" ----------------------- 0:08 PM, PDT
"h:mm a" -------------------------- 12:08 PM
"EEE, MMM d, ''yy" ---------------- Wed, Jul 4, '01
Actually, it's safer to set the current timezone set on the device with Time.getCurrentTimezone()
, or else you will get the current time in UTC.
Time today = new Time(Time.getCurrentTimezone());
today.setToNow();
Then, you can get all the date fields you want, like, for example:
textViewDay.setText(today.monthDay + ""); // Day of the month (1-31)
textViewMonth.setText(today.month + ""); // Month (0-11)
textViewYear.setText(today.year + ""); // Year
textViewTime.setText(today.format("%k:%M:%S")); // Current time
See android.text.format.Time class for all the details.
UPDATE
As many people are pointing out, Google says this class has a number of issues and is not supposed to be used anymore:
This class has a number of issues and it is recommended that GregorianCalendar is used instead.
Known issues:
For historical reasons when performing time calculations all arithmetic currently takes place using 32-bit integers. This limits the reliable time range representable from 1902 until 2037.See the wikipedia article on the Year 2038 problem for details. Do not rely on this behavior; it may change in the future. Calling switchTimezone(String) on a date that cannot exist, such as a wall time that was skipped due to a DST transition, will result in a date in 1969 (i.e. -1, or 1 second before 1st Jan 1970 UTC). Much of the formatting / parsing assumes ASCII text and is therefore not suitable for use with non-ASCII scripts.
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This class was deprecated in API level 22. We can use GregorianCalendar instead. – Choletski Dec 14 '15 at 8:29
For the current date and time, use:
String mydate = java.text.DateFormat.getDateTimeInstance().format(Calendar.getInstance().getTime());
Which outputs:
Feb 27, 2012 5:41:23 PM
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i got the the current date,day and time of the system but time is not changing.i wnat to increase time seconds by seconds.how can i do? – Bhavesh Hirpara Oct 1 '12 at 6:23
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2This is the recommended way of doing it, according to the Android API: developer.android.com/reference/java/text/… Thanks! – M Granja Aug 7 '13 at 11:05
tl;dr
Instant.now() // Current moment in UTC.
…or…
ZonedDateTime.now( ZoneId.of( "America/Montreal" ) ) // In a particular time zone
Details
The other Answers, while correct, are outdated. The old date-time classes have proven to be poorly designed, confusing, and troublesome.
java.time
Those old classes have been supplanted by the java.time framework.
- Java 8 and later: The java.time framework is built-in.
- Java 7 & 6: Use the backport of java.time.
- Android: Use this wrapped version of that backport.
These new classes are inspired by the highly successful Joda-Time project, defined by JSR 310, and extended by the ThreeTen-Extra project.
See the Oracle Tutorial.
Instant
An Instant
is a moment on the timeline in UTC with resolution up to nanoseconds.
Instant instant = Instant.now(); // Current moment in UTC.
Time Zone
Apply a time zone (ZoneId
) to get a ZonedDateTime
. If you omit the time zone your JVM’s current default time zone is implicitly applied. Better to specify explicitly the desired/expected time zone.
Use proper time zone names in the format of continent/region
such as America/Montreal
, Europe/Brussels
, or Asia/Kolkata
. Never use the 3-4 letter abbreviations such as EST
or IST
as they are neither standardized nor unique.
ZoneId zoneId = ZoneId.of( "America/Montreal" ); // Or "Asia/Kolkata", "Europe/Paris", and so on.
ZonedDateTime zdt = ZonedDateTime.ofInstant( instant , zoneId );
Generating Strings
You can easily generate a String
as a textual representation of the date-time value. You can go with a standard format, your own custom format, or an automatically localized format.
ISO 8601
You can call the toString
methods to get text formatted using the common and sensible ISO 8601 standard.
String output = instant.toString();
2016-03-23T03:09:01.613Z
Note that for ZonedDateTime
, the toString
method extends the ISO 8601 standard by appending the name of the time zone in square brackets. Extremely useful and important information, but not standard.
2016-03-22T20:09:01.613-08:00[America/Los_Angeles]
Custom format
Or specify your own particular formatting pattern with the DateTimeFormatter
class.
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern( "dd/MM/yyyy hh:mm a" );
Specify a Locale
for a human language (English, French, etc.) to use in translating the name of day/month and also in defining cultural norms such as the order of year and month and date. Note that Locale
has nothing to do with time zone.
formatter = formatter.withLocale( Locale.US ); // Or Locale.CANADA_FRENCH or such.
String output = zdt.format( formatter );
Localizing
Better yet, let java.time do the work of localizing automatically.
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofLocalizedDateTime( FormatStyle.MEDIUM );
String output = zdt.format( formatter.withLocale( Locale.US ) ); // Or Locale.CANADA_FRENCH and so on.
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.
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.
Where to obtain the java.time classes?
- Java SE 8, Java SE 9, Java SE 10, and later
- Built-in.
- Part of the standard Java API with a bundled implementation.
- Java 9 adds some minor features and fixes.
- Java SE 6 and Java SE 7
- Much of the java.time functionality is back-ported to Java 6 & 7 in ThreeTen-Backport.
- Android
- Later versions of Android bundle implementations of the java.time classes.
- For earlier Android (<26), the ThreeTenABP project adapts ThreeTen-Backport (mentioned above). See How to use ThreeTenABP….
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2@giraffe.guru Reread my Answer. You missed the third bullet. Much of the java.time functionality is back-ported to Java 6 & 7 in ThreeTen-Backport and further adapted to Android in ThreeTenABP. – Basil Bourque Jun 25 '16 at 5:38
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2@Ryde As I said to giraffe.guru, reread my Answer. Look for third bullet mentioning "Android". – Basil Bourque Aug 13 '18 at 1:00
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I believe that you are right: your new java.time edition table conveys the message more directly and easily than a bullet list. If that were me I think I’d complicate matters just a little further and put a check mark in brackets (or something similar) under ThreeTenBackport/Java 8+ and also under ThreeTenABP/Android 26+ since these combinations do work, only there isn’t usually any point in using them. Android apps being developed that use ThreeTenABP and target a range of Android API levels both over and under level 26. It seems to me that the developers choose well in these cases. – Ole V.V. Sep 29 '19 at 11:52
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1@OleV.V. Thank you for suggesting a secondary check mark in the graphic table. I have been using that in later versions of the table. Much improved. – Basil Bourque May 28 '20 at 15:20
Try with this way All formats are given below to get date and time format.
Calendar c = Calendar.getInstance();
SimpleDateFormat dateformat = new SimpleDateFormat("dd-MMM-yyyy hh:mm:ss aa");
String datetime = dateformat.format(c.getTime());
System.out.println(datetime);
To ge the current time you can use System.currentTimeMillis()
which is standard in Java. Then you can use it to create a date
Date currentDate = new Date(System.currentTimeMillis());
And as mentioned by others to create a time
Time currentTime = new Time();
currentTime.setToNow();
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13No need for
System.currentTimeMillis()
; simplynew Date()
does the same thing. – Jonik Dec 27 '13 at 22:11 -
@Jonik
Cannot resolve constructor Date()
in android, the Android SDK uses a mixture of Java 6 and 7. – stephen Mar 16 '15 at 9:59 -
1Thank you.
Date currentDate = new Date(System.currentTimeMillis());
is correct – mghhgm Mar 3 '16 at 7:41 -
@mghhgm No,
new Date(System.currentTimeMillis())
in not right: (a) it is redundant, as that is the exact same asnew Date()
. (b) The troublesomejava.util.Date
class is now supplanted byjava.time.Instant
as of Java 8 and later. Back-ported to Java 6 & 7 in the ThreeTen-Backport project, and to earlier Android (<26) in ThreeTenABP. – Basil Bourque Jun 23 '18 at 3:28
You can use the code:
Calendar c = Calendar.getInstance();
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
String strDate = sdf.format(c.getTime());
Output:
2014-11-11 00:47:55
You also get some more formatting options for SimpleDateFormat
from here.
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FYI, the troublesome old date-time classes such as
java.util.Date
,java.util.Calendar
, andjava.text.SimpleDateFormat
are now legacy, supplanted by the java.time classes built into Java 8 and later. See Tutorial by Oracle. – Basil Bourque Jun 23 '18 at 3:30
Easy, you can dissect the time to get separate values for current time, as follows:
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
int millisecond = cal.get(Calendar.MILLISECOND);
int second = cal.get(Calendar.SECOND);
int minute = cal.get(Calendar.MINUTE);
//12 hour format
int hour = cal.get(Calendar.HOUR);
//24 hour format
int hourofday = cal.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY);
Same goes for the date, as follows:
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
int dayofyear = cal.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_YEAR);
int year = cal.get(Calendar.YEAR);
int dayofweek = cal.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK);
int dayofmonth = cal.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH);
There are several options as Android is mainly Java, but if you wish to write it in a textView, the following code would do the trick:
String currentDateTimeString = DateFormat.getDateInstance().format(new Date());
// textView is the TextView view that should display it
textView.setText(currentDateTimeString);
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8You should use
Calendar
orGregorianCalendar
. TheDate
class is deprecated. – Joseph Earl Mar 20 '11 at 16:22 -
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12According to the Date() reference documentation (developer.android.com/reference/java/util/Date.html) there is nothing referring to the Date() class being deprecated - however several methods and constructors are deprecated. – Zac Seth Apr 16 '11 at 18:40
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2This will produce incorrect result in sense of current user settings (12/24 time format, for example). Use android.text.format.DateFormat.getTimeFormat(Context context) to get DateFormat for current user settings. – wonder.mice Oct 27 '11 at 20:58
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@Zac you are right even getTime method of Date is even more use full – user2730944 Sep 6 '13 at 12:17
SimpleDateFormat databaseDateTimeFormate = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss");
SimpleDateFormat databaseDateFormate = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
SimpleDateFormat sdf1 = new SimpleDateFormat("dd.MM.yy");
SimpleDateFormat sdf2 = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy.MM.dd G 'at' hh:mm:ss z");
SimpleDateFormat sdf3 = new SimpleDateFormat("EEE, MMM d, ''yy");
SimpleDateFormat sdf4 = new SimpleDateFormat("h:mm a");
SimpleDateFormat sdf5 = new SimpleDateFormat("h:mm");
SimpleDateFormat sdf6 = new SimpleDateFormat("H:mm:ss:SSS");
SimpleDateFormat sdf7 = new SimpleDateFormat("K:mm a,z");
SimpleDateFormat sdf8 = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy.MMMMM.dd GGG hh:mm aaa");
String currentDateandTime = databaseDateTimeFormate.format(new Date()); //2009-06-30 08:29:36
String currentDateandTime = databaseDateFormate.format(new Date()); //2009-06-30
String currentDateandTime = sdf1.format(new Date()); //30.06.09
String currentDateandTime = sdf2.format(new Date()); //2009.06.30 AD at 08:29:36 PDT
String currentDateandTime = sdf3.format(new Date()); //Tue, Jun 30, '09
String currentDateandTime = sdf4.format(new Date()); //8:29 PM
String currentDateandTime = sdf5.format(new Date()); //8:29
String currentDateandTime = sdf6.format(new Date()); //8:28:36:249
String currentDateandTime = sdf7.format(new Date()); //8:29 AM,PDT
String currentDateandTime = sdf8.format(new Date()); //2009.June.30 AD 08:29 AM
Date format Patterns
G Era designator (before christ, after christ)
y Year (e.g. 12 or 2012). Use either yy or yyyy.
M Month in year. Number of M's determine length of format (e.g. MM, MMM or MMMMM)
d Day in month. Number of d's determine length of format (e.g. d or dd)
h Hour of day, 1-12 (AM / PM) (normally hh)
H Hour of day, 0-23 (normally HH)
m Minute in hour, 0-59 (normally mm)
s Second in minute, 0-59 (normally ss)
S Millisecond in second, 0-999 (normally SSS)
E Day in week (e.g Monday, Tuesday etc.)
D Day in year (1-366)
F Day of week in month (e.g. 1st Thursday of December)
w Week in year (1-53)
W Week in month (0-5)
a AM / PM marker
k Hour in day (1-24, unlike HH's 0-23)
K Hour in day, AM / PM (0-11)
z Time Zone
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1Although other answers are correct too. I liked this answer as it helps related time related problems too. Thanks @Vighnesh KM – Ankit Gupta Oct 4 '16 at 12:56
final Calendar c = Calendar.getInstance();
int mYear = c.get(Calendar.YEAR);
int mMonth = c.get(Calendar.MONTH);
int mDay = c.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH);
textView.setText(""+mDay+"-"+mMonth+"-"+mYear);
This is a method that will be useful to get date and time:
private String getDate(){
DateFormat dfDate = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MM/dd");
String date=dfDate.format(Calendar.getInstance().getTime());
DateFormat dfTime = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm");
String time = dfTime.format(Calendar.getInstance().getTime());
return date + " " + time;
}
You can call this method and get the current date and time values:
2017/01//09 19:23
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I don't like the tight coupling of presentation logic and process logic; I'd prefer a method that just does the formatting & takes a date input param. I also don't understand why you're using 2
SimpleDateFormat
s & 2Date
s... can't you just use"yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm"
as the format & call calendar once? – charles-allen Nov 23 '17 at 10:31
For the current date and time with format, Use
In Java
Calendar c = Calendar.getInstance();
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
String strDate = sdf.format(c.getTime());
Log.d("Date","DATE : " + strDate)
In Kotlin
if (Build.VERSION.SDK_INT >= Build.VERSION_CODES.O) {
val current = LocalDateTime.now()
val formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("dd.MM.yyyy. HH:mm:ss")
var myDate: String = current.format(formatter)
Log.d("Date","DATE : " + myDate)
} else {
var date = Date()
val formatter = SimpleDateFormat("MMM dd yyyy HH:mma")
val myDate: String = formatter.format(date)
Log.d("Date","DATE : " + myDate)
}
Date Formater patterns
"yyyy.MM.dd G 'at' HH:mm:ss z" ---- 2001.07.04 AD at 12:08:56 PDT
"hh 'o''clock' a, zzzz" ----------- 12 o'clock PM, Pacific Daylight Time
"EEE, d MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss Z"------- Wed, 4 Jul 2001 12:08:56 -0700
"yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSZ"------- 2001-07-04T12:08:56.235-0700
"yyMMddHHmmssZ"-------------------- 010704120856-0700
"K:mm a, z" ----------------------- 0:08 PM, PDT
"h:mm a" -------------------------- 12:08 PM
"EEE, MMM d, ''yy" ---------------- Wed, Jul 4, '01
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Thanks for wanting co contribute. Are you contributing something that isn’t already in the previous 36 answers? In any case you are still using the notoriously troublesome and long outdated
SimpleDateFormat
class. Even before Oreo you don’t need to, you may instead use ThreeTenABP, the backport of java.time, the modern Java date and time API. – Ole V.V. Jun 13 '19 at 8:59
If you need the current date:
Calendar cc = Calendar.getInstance();
int year = cc.get(Calendar.YEAR);
int month = cc.get(Calendar.MONTH);
int mDay = cc.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH);
System.out.println("Date", year + ":" + month + ":" + mDay);
If you need the current time:
int mHour = cc.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY);
int mMinute = cc.get(Calendar.MINUTE);
System.out.println("time_format" + String.format("%02d:%02d", mHour , mMinute));
Time time = new Time();
time.setToNow();
System.out.println("time: " + time.hour+":"+time.minute);
This will give you, for example, 12:32.
Remember to import android.text.format.Time;
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss");
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
System.out.println("time => " + dateFormat.format(cal.getTime()));
String time_str = dateFormat.format(cal.getTime());
String[] s = time_str.split(" ");
for (int i = 0; i < s.length; i++) {
System.out.println("date => " + s[i]);
}
int year_sys = Integer.parseInt(s[0].split("/")[0]);
int month_sys = Integer.parseInt(s[0].split("/")[1]);
int day_sys = Integer.parseInt(s[0].split("/")[2]);
int hour_sys = Integer.parseInt(s[1].split(":")[0]);
int min_sys = Integer.parseInt(s[1].split(":")[1]);
System.out.println("year_sys => " + year_sys);
System.out.println("month_sys => " + month_sys);
System.out.println("day_sys => " + day_sys);
System.out.println("hour_sys => " + hour_sys);
System.out.println("min_sys => " + min_sys);
You can also use android.os.SystemClock. For example SystemClock.elapsedRealtime() will give you more accurate time readings when the phone is asleep.
You can simply use the following code:
DateFormat df = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm"); // Format time
String time = df.format(Calendar.getInstance().getTime());
DateFormat df1 = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MM/dd"); // Format date
String date = df1.format(Calendar.getInstance().getTime());
For a customized time and date format:
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat= new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZZZZZ",Locale.ENGLISH);
String cDateTime=dateFormat.format(new Date());
Output is like below format: 2015-06-18T10:15:56-05:00
Date todayDate = new Date();
todayDate.getDay();
todayDate.getHours();
todayDate.getMinutes();
todayDate.getMonth();
todayDate.getTime();
You can obtain the date by using:
Time t = new Time(Time.getCurrentTimezone());
t.setToNow();
String date = t.format("%Y/%m/%d");
This will give you a result in a nice form, as in this example: "2014/02/09".
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The parameterless constructor
Time t = new Time();
will use the default timezone. In my experience, default == current. – William T. Mallard Feb 16 '14 at 23:44
Well I had problems with some answers by the API so I fuse this code, I hope it serves them guys:
Time t = new Time(Time.getCurrentTimezone());
t.setToNow();
String date1 = t.format("%Y/%m/%d");
Date date = new Date(System.currentTimeMillis());
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("hh:mm aa", Locale.ENGLISH);
String var = dateFormat.format(date);
String horafecha = var+ " - " + date1;
tvTime.setText(horafecha);
Output: 03:25 PM - 2017/10/03
Try This
String mytime = (DateFormat.format("dd-MM-yyyy hh:mm:ss", new java.util.Date()).toString());
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This is perfect one liner and elegant solution. That's all what is needed, not unnecessarily long solutions like in other answers. – zeeshan Nov 21 '19 at 19:12
Below method will return current date and time in String, Use different time zone according to your actual time zone.I've used GMT
public static String GetToday(){
Date presentTime_Date = Calendar.getInstance().getTime();
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
dateFormat.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("GMT"));
return dateFormat.format(presentTime_Date);
}
You should use Calender class according to new API. Date class is deprecated now.
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
String date = ""+cal.get(Calendar.DATE)+"-"+(cal.get(Calendar.MONTH)+1)+"-"+cal.get(Calendar.YEAR);
String time = ""+cal.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY)+":"+cal.get(Calendar.MINUTE);
Try to use the below code:
Date date = new Date();
SimpleDateFormat dateFormatWithZone = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS'Z'",Locale.getDefault());
String currentDate = dateFormatWithZone.format(date);