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I have a variable of type LocalDateTime which has a date stored, for example 14/03/2020. I would like to know how I can get the days remaining to be again the 14th day of the month 3; in this case (from August 1, 2022), there are 225 days. I really have no idea how to get that value.

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    Sorry, Stack Overflow isn't just insert requirements, receive solution. The expectation is that you've made an attempt and can demonstrate that attempt. Start by trying to work out what date you're looking for, then work out how you can calculate the difference between them in days. Take a look at the API of LocalDateTime. Specifically, plusMonths and getDayOfWeek.
    – Michael
    Aug 1, 2022 at 18:23
  • Welcome to Stack Overflow. Even if you cannot see how to write any code, search and tell us what you think of what you found and what you still see as missing. Showing an effort on your side always provides for a good impression, and it allows us to give much better focused answers.
    – Ole V.V.
    Aug 1, 2022 at 19:02
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    Jose, I've made some important improvements to the handling of leap days since you accepted my answer; you may want to review the answers.
    – erickson
    Aug 3, 2022 at 4:34

3 Answers 3

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Determine a year by comparing the date portion of the current and reference dates. If the date has passed already, use next year; otherwise, use the current year. Then combine this year with the month and day of month from the reference date to yield the anniversary. Finally, compute the difference in days between the reference date and the anniversary.

static LocalDate nextAnniversary(LocalDate date, LocalDate today) {
    MonthDay anniversary = MonthDay.from(date);
    int year = today.getYear();
    if (anniversary.isBefore(MonthDay.from(today))) year += 1;
    return anniversary.atYear(year);
}

An example of this function in use:

LocalDateTime stored = LocalDateTime.of(LocalDate.of(2020, 3, 14), LocalTime.NOON);
LocalDate today = LocalDate.now(); /* Or, better: LocalDate.now(clock) */
LocalDate anniversary = nextAnniversary(stored, today);
long daysUntil = today.until(stored, ChronoUnit.DAYS);

Update: This took a few tries to get right. Leap day complicates things; it is best to determine the year first, then to combine it with the original month and day, rather than to increment a past date by one year. (h/t Basil Bourque and Ole V.V.)

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The Answer by erickson is good and proper. For fun, here are a couple of different solutions. One uses Period#isNegative to detect future or past. The other wraps this code as a convenient TemporalAdjuster.

Period#isNegative

This code uses Period#isNegative to figure out if the proposed March 14 is past or future.

MonthDay is a way to represent, well, a month and a day-of-month, without any particular year.

Be aware that determining today’s date requires a time zone. Each day starts earlier in the east than in the west. So while it may be “tomorrow” in Tokyo Japan, it can simultaneously be “yesterday” in Edmonton Canada. If you omit an explicit time zone, the JVM’s current default time zone is applied implicitly.

public static long daysUntilMarch14 ( ZoneId zoneId )
{
    LocalDate today = LocalDate.now( zoneId );

    MonthDay march14 = MonthDay.of( 3 , 14 );
    LocalDate then = today.with( march14 );

    if ( Period.between( today , then ).isNegative() ) { then = then.plusYears( 1 ); }
    return ChronoUnit.DAYS.between( today , then );
}

Example usage.

long days = daysUntilMarch14( ZoneId.of( "Africa/Tunis" ) );

See this code run live at Ideone.com.

225

You could also write a test for past or future as:

if( today.with( MonthDay.of( 3 , 14 ) ).isBefore( today ) ) { … add one year … }

TemporalAdjuster

If you want to get fancy, you could implement this code as a TemporalAdjuster. For similarity, see TemporalAdjusters.next(DayOfWeek dayOfWeek) API, and its source code.

public static TemporalAdjuster nextMarch14 ( )
{
    return ( Temporal temporal ) -> {
        MonthDay march14 = MonthDay.of( 3 , 14 );
        Temporal then = temporal.with( march14 );
        if ( ChronoUnit.DAYS.between( temporal , then ) < 0 )
        {
            then = then.plus( Period.ofYears( 1 ) );
        }
        return then;
    };
}

Usage:

LocalDate
.now( ZoneId.of( "Africa/Tunis" ) )
.with( UntilMarch14.nextMarch14() )

See this code run live at Ideone.com.

2023-03-14

Be aware that in java.time, in day-to-day work we do not make use of the more general interfaces, abstract classes, and superclasses. Those are intended for internal use only, generally. The Javadoc advises the use of the more concrete classes for regular work. But here, in creating a TemporalAdjuster, we are acting as if doing internal java.time work, so we make use of Temporal.

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  • I think this answer handles leap days better than mine for most use cases. That is, a date of March 14 in a leap year is treated as March 14, not as the 74th day of the year (in most years, the 74th day is March 15).
    – erickson
    Aug 1, 2022 at 21:14
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    LocalDateTime localDatetime = LocalDateTime.of(2020, 03, 14, 0, 0);
    LocalDate date1 = localDatetime.toLocalDate(); //convert localDateTime to localDate 
    LocalDate date2 = date1.plusMonths(3); //add n months
    long days = ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(date1, date2); //get days in between

You can use ChronoUnit (https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/time/temporal/ChronoUnit.html) to get the number of days in between.

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  • That should help the OP on the right way. The way I read the question they wanted to count from today’s date (1 August 2022) to next 14 March (in this case 14 March 2023).
    – Ole V.V.
    Aug 1, 2022 at 19:05

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