How do I convert File#lastModified()
to a real date? The format is not really important.
4 Answers
Date d = new Date(file.lastModified());
lastModified()
returns the milliseconds since 1970-01-01, and the Date
class stores its time also in the same way. The Date(long)
constructor takes these milliseconds, and initializes the Date
with it.
-
4When using java.nio.file.attribute.FileTime, toMillis() has to be called– kopporFeb 5, 2015 at 16:19
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1
lastModified() returns the milliseconds since 1970-01-01
using what timezone? I have an issue sending the date to a javascript running on the browser, and the date is one day greater than the server date.– ps0604Aug 15, 2018 at 22:17 -
@ps0604: I believe in the "current" timezone, which can be found with System.getProperty("user.timezone")– DanielAug 17, 2018 at 9:50
Just you use the SimpleDateFormat
class to convert long to date.
Only you execute code:
new SimpleDateFormat("dd-MM-yyyy HH-mm-ss").format(
new Date(new File(filename).lastModified())
);
What you get is a long number representing the number of millis elapsed from Jan 1st, 1970. That's the standard way of representing dates.
try this:
java.util.Date myDate = new java.util.Date(theFile.lastModified());
and now you have a Date object at hand.
You can use SimpleDateFormat to print that date in a cuter way.
Get the last modified timestamp, as described in the duplicate of your question
Create a new
Date
object, orCalendar
object.new Date(timestamp)
. OrCalendar.getInstance()
and then callsetTimeInMillis(timestamp)
. As the name suggests, the timestamp is actually a number of milliseconds (since Jan 1st 1970)You can then format the date via
java.text.SimpleDateFormat