I can convert a unix timestamp to a Date()
object by putting the long
value into the Date()
constructor. For eg: I could have it as new Date(1318762128031)
.
But after that, how can I get back the unix timestamp from the Date()
object?
I can convert a unix timestamp to a Date()
object by putting the long
value into the Date()
constructor. For eg: I could have it as new Date(1318762128031)
.
But after that, how can I get back the unix timestamp from the Date()
object?
getTime()
retrieves the milliseconds since Jan 1, 1970 GMT passed to the constructor. It should not be too hard to get the Unix time (same, but in seconds) from that.
getTime() = unixTimestamp * 1000
), getTime()
would always return three Zeros at the end, but in fact can return anything from ending with 000
to 999
, which means it has a higher precision due to milliseconds and is not just "*1000". Meaning: Comparing a real unixTimestamp*1000 with the getTime()
result would only succeed in ~0.1% of the cases.
To get a timestamp
from Date()
, you'll need to divide getTime()
by 1000
, i.e. :
Date currentDate = new Date();
currentDate.getTime() / 1000;
// 1397132691
or simply:
long unixTime = System.currentTimeMillis() / 1000L;
import java.text.DateFormat;
import java.text.ParseException;
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat;
import java.util.TimeZone;
public class Timeconversion {
private DateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyyMMddHHmm", Locale.ENGLISH); //Specify your locale
public long timeConversion(String time) {
long unixTime = 0;
dateFormat.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("GMT+5:30")); //Specify your timezone
try {
unixTime = dateFormat.parse(time).getTime();
unixTime = unixTime / 1000;
} catch (ParseException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return unixTime;
}
}
In java 8, it's convenient to use the new date lib and getEpochSecond
method to get the timestamp (it's in second)
Instant.now().getEpochSecond();
Instant
instead of Instant.now()
. Or yourDesiredJavaUtilDate.toInstant()
if you got an old-fashioned Date
from a legacy API.
I dont know if you want to achieve that in js or java, in js the simplest way to get the unix timestampt (this is time in seconds from 1/1/1970) it's as follows:
var myDate = new Date();
console.log(+myDate); // +myDateObject give you the unix from that date
Use SimpleDateFormat
class. Take a look on its javadoc: it explains how to use format switches.