83

After 4 hours non-stop trying to resolve the problem I have decided to ask here if someone could help me.

The problem is that my Android client when tries to deserialize the data received from a server throw the "Unparseable: 1302828677828" exception.

I would like to know if it is possible to deserialize a millisecond-format date using Gson.

4
  • What date/time is this supposed to represent?
    – Squonk
    Apr 15, 2011 at 1:11
  • Can't you just parse it as a long, and then programmatically convert the long to a Date in your code?
    – aroth
    Apr 15, 2011 at 1:12
  • 13
    Finally I got the solution: // Creates the json object which will manage the information received GsonBuilder builder = new GsonBuilder(); // Register an adapter to manage the date types as long values builder.registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, new JsonDeserializer<Date>() { public Date deserialize(JsonElement json, Type typeOfT, JsonDeserializationContext context) throws JsonParseException { return new Date(json.getAsJsonPrimitive().getAsLong()); } }); Gson gson = builder.create();
    – Alfonso
    Apr 15, 2011 at 20:26
  • @Alfonso This solution still works 12 years later. Thanks :)
    – Sai
    Jan 20, 2023 at 15:03

7 Answers 7

150

Alfonso's comment:

Finally I got the solution:

// Creates the json object which will manage the information received 
GsonBuilder builder = new GsonBuilder(); 

// Register an adapter to manage the date types as long values 
builder.registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, new JsonDeserializer<Date>() { 
   public Date deserialize(JsonElement json, Type typeOfT, JsonDeserializationContext context) throws JsonParseException {
      return new Date(json.getAsJsonPrimitive().getAsLong()); 
   } 
});

Gson gson = builder.create();
9
  • Thank you so much you saved my time !!
    – Chris Sim
    Aug 26, 2016 at 13:12
  • timezone problems
    – ChRoNoN
    Sep 27, 2016 at 15:15
  • Thanks this helped me as well. Though I used this for Timestamp.
    – Feru
    Dec 7, 2017 at 20:30
  • 3
    .getAsJsonPrimitive() can be omitted, and with Java 8 lambdas it is even shorter: Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, (JsonDeserializer) (json, typeOfT, context) -> new Date(json.getAsLong())).create();
    – gmk57
    Sep 24, 2018 at 11:40
  • 2
    It would help having the precise import lines too.
    – nonzaprej
    Jun 12, 2019 at 13:23
3

I wrote an ImprovedDateTypeAdapter based on GSON default DateTypeAdapter that supports default dates format and the timestamp (long) format.

import com.google.gson.Gson;
import com.google.gson.JsonSyntaxException;
import com.google.gson.TypeAdapter;
import com.google.gson.TypeAdapterFactory;
import com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken;
import com.google.gson.stream.JsonReader;
import com.google.gson.stream.JsonToken;
import com.google.gson.stream.JsonWriter;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.text.DateFormat;
import java.text.ParseException;
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.Locale;
import java.util.TimeZone;

public final class ImprovedDateTypeAdapter extends TypeAdapter<Date> {

    public static final TypeAdapterFactory FACTORY = new TypeAdapterFactory() {

        public <T> TypeAdapter<T> create(Gson gson, TypeToken<T> typeToken) {

            @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
            TypeAdapter<T> typeAdapter = (TypeAdapter<T>) ((typeToken.getRawType() == Date.class) ? new ImprovedDateTypeAdapter()
                    : null);
            return typeAdapter;
        }
    };
    private final DateFormat enUsFormat;
    private final DateFormat localFormat;
    private final DateFormat iso8601Format;

    public ImprovedDateTypeAdapter() {
        this.enUsFormat = DateFormat.getDateTimeInstance(2, 2, Locale.US);

        this.localFormat = DateFormat.getDateTimeInstance(2, 2);

        this.iso8601Format = buildIso8601Format();
    }

    private static DateFormat buildIso8601Format() {
        DateFormat iso8601Format = new SimpleDateFormat(
                "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss'Z'", Locale.US);
        iso8601Format.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC"));
        return iso8601Format;
    }

    public Date read(JsonReader in) throws IOException {
        if (in.peek() == JsonToken.NULL) {
            in.nextNull();
            return null;
        }
        return deserializeToDate(in.nextString());
    }

    private synchronized Date deserializeToDate(String json) {
        try {

            return new Date(Long.parseLong(json));
        } catch (Exception e) {

            try {

                return this.localFormat.parse(json);
            } catch (ParseException e1) {

                try {

                    return this.enUsFormat.parse(json);
                } catch (ParseException e2) {

                    try {

                        return this.iso8601Format.parse(json);
                    } catch (ParseException e3) {

                        throw new JsonSyntaxException(json, e3);
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    }

    public synchronized void write(JsonWriter out, Date value)
            throws IOException {
        if (value == null) {
            out.nullValue();
            return;
        }
        String dateFormatAsString = this.enUsFormat.format(value);
        out.value(dateFormatAsString);
    }
}

To use it:

// Creates the json object which will manage the information received 
GsonBuilder builder = new GsonBuilder(); 

// Register an adapter to manage the date types as long values 
builder.registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, new ImprovedDateTypeAdapter());

Gson gson = builder.create();
1
  • This one is perfectly without any glitch. Awesome work Aug 2, 2022 at 14:24
2
JsonSerializer<Date> serializer= new JsonSerializer<Date>() {
  @Override
  public JsonElement serialize(Date src, Type typeOfSrc, JsonSerializationContext 
             context) {
    return src == null ? null : new JsonPrimitive(src.getTime());
  }
};

JsonDeserializer<Date> deserializer= new JsonDeserializer<Date>() {
  @Override
  public Date deserialize(JsonElement json, Type typeOfT,
       JsonDeserializationContext context) throws JsonParseException {
    return json == null ? null : new Date(json.getAsLong());
  }
};

Gson gson = new GsonBuilder()
   .registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, serializer)
   .registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, deserializer).create();
1

Use below snippet for converting milliseconds to Date while processing JSON.

    GsonBuilder gsonBuilder = new GsonBuilder();
    // Adapter to convert long values to date types
    gsonBuilder.registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, new JsonDeserializer<Date>() {
        public Date deserialize(JsonElement jsonElement, Type typeOfObj, JsonDeserializationContext context)
               throws JsonParseException {
                   //Converting milliseconds to current Date. (instead of 1970)
                return new Date(jsonElement.getAsLong() * 1000);
            }
        });
    Gson gson = gsonBuilder.setPrettyPrinting().create();
0

I have the same problem when I tried to deserialize DateTime field with Rest client of Android annotations library. As a solution I've created custom GsonHttpMessageConverter

public class CustomGsonHttpMessageConverter extends GsonHttpMessageConverter {

    public CustomGsonHttpMessageConverter() {
        // Creates the json object which will manage the information received
        GsonBuilder builder = new GsonBuilder();

        // Register an adapter to manage the date types as long values
        builder.registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, new JsonDeserializer<Date>() {
            public Date deserialize(JsonElement json, Type typeOfT, JsonDeserializationContext context) throws JsonParseException {
                return new Date(json.getAsJsonPrimitive().getAsLong());
            }
        });

        setGson(builder.create());
    }
}

and define it in rest client

@Rest(rootUrl = "http://192.168.1.1:8080", converters = {CustomGsonHttpMessageConverter.class})
public interface RestClient extends RestClientErrorHandling {
...

I hope it will be helpful

0

For some reason I had compilation errors in Intellij with the above code using an anonymous class; a lambda worked for me:

private static Gson buildGson(){
    // Deserialize longs as Dates
    final JsonDeserializer<Date> dateDeserializer = (json, type, context) -> json == null ? null : new Date(json.getAsLong());
    return new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapter(Date.class, dateDeserializer).create();
}
0
    
        import com.google.gson.Gson;
        import com.google.gson.GsonBuilder;
        import com.google.gson.JsonDeserializer;
        import java.sql.Timestamp;    
        
        
        Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapter(Timestamp.class, (JsonDeserializer) (json, typeOfT, context) -> {
                            return new Timestamp(json.getAsLong());
                        }).create();
1
  • 1
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