Date and time conversion to some other Timezone in java
i have written this code to convert the current system date and time to some other timezone. I am not getting any error but i am not getting my output as expected. Like if i execute my program at a particular time.. My output is ::
The current time in India is :: Fri Feb 24 16:09:23 IST 2012
The date and time in :: Central Standard Time is :: Sat Feb 25 03:39:23 IST 2012
And the actual Time according to CST time zone is ::
Friday, 24 February 4:39:16 a.m(GMT - 6:00)
So there's some time gap. and i don't know why this is happening. Any help will be appreciated.. The code is ::
package MyPackage;
import java.text.DateFormat;
import java.text.ParseException;
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat;
import java.util.Calendar;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.TimeZone;
public class Temp2 {
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
Calendar currentdate = Calendar.getInstance();
String strdate = null;
DateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss");
strdate = formatter.format(currentdate.getTime());
TimeZone obj = TimeZone.getTimeZone("CST");
formatter.setTimeZone(obj);
//System.out.println(strdate);
//System.out.println(formatter.parse(strdate));
Date theResult = formatter.parse(strdate);
System.out.println("The current time in India is :: " +currentdate.getTime());
System.out.println("The date and time in :: "+ obj.getDisplayName() + "is ::" + theResult);
} catch (ParseException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Solution 1:
It's over the web. Could have googled. Anyways, here is a version for you (shamelessly picked and modified from here):
Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance();
TimeZone fromTimeZone = calendar.getTimeZone();
TimeZone toTimeZone = TimeZone.getTimeZone("CST");
calendar.setTimeZone(fromTimeZone);
calendar.add(Calendar.MILLISECOND, fromTimeZone.getRawOffset() * -1);
if (fromTimeZone.inDaylightTime(calendar.getTime())) {
calendar.add(Calendar.MILLISECOND, calendar.getTimeZone().getDSTSavings() * -1);
}
calendar.add(Calendar.MILLISECOND, toTimeZone.getRawOffset());
if (toTimeZone.inDaylightTime(calendar.getTime())) {
calendar.add(Calendar.MILLISECOND, toTimeZone.getDSTSavings());
}
System.out.println(calendar.getTime());
Solution 2:
Your mistake is to call parse
instead of format
.
You call parse
to parse a Date from a String, but in your case you've got a Date and need to format it using the correct Timezone.
Replace your code with
Calendar currentdate = Calendar.getInstance();
DateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss");
TimeZone obj = TimeZone.getTimeZone("CST");
formatter.setTimeZone(obj);
System.out.println("Local:: " +currentdate.getTime());
System.out.println("CST:: "+ formatter.format(currentdate.getTime()));
and I hope you'll get the output you are expecting.
Solution 3:
SimpleDateFormat#setTimezone()
is the answer. One formatter with ETC
timezone you use for parsing, another with UTC
for producing output string:
DateFormat dfNy = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss", Locale.ROOT);
dfNy.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("EST"));
DateFormat dfUtc = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss", Locale.ROOT);
dfUtc.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC"));
try {
return dfUtc.format(dfNy.parse(input));
} catch (ParseException e) {
return null; // invalid input
}