38

I have an instant formatted like this:

DateTimeFormatter formatter = 
 DateTimeFormatter.ofLocalizedDateTime(FormatStyle.SHORT )
                                 .withLocale( Locale.UK )
                                 .withZone( ZoneId.of("UTC"));

String instant = formatter.format(Instant.now()).toString();

and i want to calculate the days, hours and minutes (if possible) between the instant and Instant.now(), something like:

// for days
String daysBetween = Instant.now() - instant;

can i do that ?

1
  • Use Duration.between(). If you want a string, search for something like [java format duration].
    – Ole V.V.
    Apr 21, 2019 at 7:04

1 Answer 1

98

To calculate days, hours and/or minutes between two Instant objects:

Instant instant1 = Instant.parse("2019-02-14T18:42:00Z");
Instant instant2 = Instant.parse("2019-04-21T05:25:00Z");

// If you only need one of them
System.out.println(ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(instant1, instant2));    // prints: 65
System.out.println(ChronoUnit.HOURS.between(instant1, instant2));   // prints: 1570
System.out.println(ChronoUnit.MINUTES.between(instant1, instant2)); // prints: 94243

// Or use alternate syntax (it's the same thing)
System.out.println(instant1.until(instant2, ChronoUnit.DAYS));    // prints: 65
System.out.println(instant1.until(instant2, ChronoUnit.HOURS));   // prints: 1570
System.out.println(instant1.until(instant2, ChronoUnit.MINUTES)); // prints: 94243

// Or use Duration
Duration duration = Duration.between(instant1, instant2);
System.out.println(duration.toDays());    // prints: 65
System.out.println(duration.toHours());   // prints: 1570
System.out.println(duration.toMinutes()); // prints: 94243

// In Java 9+, Duration can give them as parts to be used together
System.out.println(duration.toDaysPart());    // prints: 65
System.out.println(duration.toHoursPart());   // prints: 10
System.out.println(duration.toMinutesPart()); // prints: 43

// Or you can calculate the parts yourself, using epoch seconds
long seconds = instant2.getEpochSecond() - instant1.getEpochSecond();
System.out.println(seconds / 86400);     // prints: 65
System.out.println(seconds / 3600 % 24); // prints: 10
System.out.println(seconds / 60 % 60);   // prints: 43

As you can see in the last two, the difference is 65 days, 10 hours, and 43 minutes for the given sample dates.

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