/* java.util.Date Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GNU Classpath. GNU Classpath is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Classpath is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Classpath; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. Linking this library statically or dynamically with other modules is making a combined work based on this library. Thus, the terms and conditions of the GNU General Public License cover the whole combination. As a special exception, the copyright holders of this library give you permission to link this library with independent modules to produce an executable, regardless of the license terms of these independent modules, and to copy and distribute the resulting executable under terms of your choice, provided that you also meet, for each linked independent module, the terms and conditions of the license of that module. An independent module is a module which is not derived from or based on this library. If you modify this library, you may extend this exception to your version of the library, but you are not obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this exception statement from your version. */ package java.util; import gnu.java.lang.CPStringBuilder; import java.io.IOException; import java.io.ObjectInputStream; import java.io.ObjectOutputStream; import java.io.Serializable; import java.text.DateFormat; import java.text.SimpleDateFormat; /** *
* This class represents a specific time in milliseconds since the epoch. * The epoch is 1970, January 1 00:00:00.0000 UTC. *
*
* Date
is intended to reflect universal time coordinate (UTC),
* but this depends on the underlying host environment. Most operating systems
* don't handle the leap second, which occurs about once every year or
* so. The leap second is added to the last minute of the day on either
* the 30th of June or the 31st of December, creating a minute 61 seconds
* in length.
*
* The representations of the date fields are as follows: *
* Prior to JDK 1.1, this class was the sole class handling date and time
* related functionality. However, this particular solution was not
* amenable to internationalization. The new Calendar
* class should now be used to handle dates and times, with Date
* being used only for values in milliseconds since the epoch. The
* Calendar
class, and its concrete implementations, handle
* the interpretation of these values into minutes, hours, days, months
* and years. The formatting and parsing of dates is left to the
* DateFormat
class, which is able to handle the different
* types of date format which occur in different locales.
*
new GregorianCalendar(year+1900, month,
* day)
instead.
* @param year the difference between the required year and 1900.
* @param month the month as a value between 0 and 11.
* @param day the day as a value between 0 and 31.
*/
public Date(int year, int month, int day)
{
this(year, month, day, 0, 0, 0);
}
/**
* Creates a new Date Object representing the given time.
*
* @deprecated use new GregorianCalendar(year+1900, month,
* day, hour, min)
instead.
* @param year the difference between the required year and 1900.
* @param month the month as a value between 0 and 11.
* @param day the day as a value between 0 and 31.
* @param hour the hour as a value between 0 and 23, in 24-hour
* clock notation.
* @param min the minute as a value between 0 and 59.
*/
public Date(int year, int month, int day, int hour, int min)
{
this(year, month, day, hour, min, 0);
}
/**
* Creates a new Date Object representing the given time.
*
* @deprecated use new GregorianCalendar(year+1900, month,
* day, hour, min, sec)
instead.
* @param year the difference between the required year and 1900.
* @param month the month as a value between 0 and 11.
* @param day the day as a value between 0 and 31.
* @param hour the hour as a value between 0 and 23, in 24-hour
* clock notation.
* @param min the minute as a value between 0 and 59.
* @param sec the second as a value between 0 and 61 (with 60
* and 61 being leap seconds).
*/
public Date(int year, int month, int day, int hour, int min, int sec)
{
GregorianCalendar cal =
new GregorianCalendar(year + 1900, month, day, hour, min, sec);
time = cal.getTimeInMillis();
}
/**
* Creates a new Date from the given string representation. This
* does the same as new Date(Date.parse(s))
* @see #parse
* @deprecated use java.text.DateFormat.parse(s)
instead.
*/
public Date(String s)
{
time = parse(s);
}
/**
* Returns a copy of this Date
object.
*
* @return a copy, or null if the object couldn't be
* cloned.
* @see Object#clone()
*/
public Object clone()
{
try
{
return super.clone();
}
catch (CloneNotSupportedException ex)
{
return null;
}
}
/**
* Returns the number of milliseconds since the epoch
* specified by the given arguments. The arguments are
* interpreted relative to UTC rather than the local
* time zone.
*
* @deprecated Use Calendar
with a UTC
* TimeZone
instead.
* @param year the difference between the required year and 1900.
* @param month the month as a value between 0 and 11.
* @param date the day as a value between 0 and 31.
* @param hrs the hour as a value between 0 and 23, in 24-hour
* clock notation.
* @param min the minute as a value between 0 and 59.
* @param sec the second as a value between 0 and 61 (with 60
* and 61 being leap seconds).
* @return the time in milliseconds since the epoch.
*/
public static long UTC(int year, int month, int date,
int hrs, int min, int sec)
{
GregorianCalendar cal =
new GregorianCalendar(year + 1900, month, date, hrs, min, sec);
cal.set(Calendar.ZONE_OFFSET, 0);
cal.set(Calendar.DST_OFFSET, 0);
return cal.getTimeInMillis();
}
/**
* Gets the time represented by this object.
*
* @return the time in milliseconds since the epoch.
*/
public long getTime()
{
return time;
}
/**
* Returns the number of minutes offset used with UTC to give the time
* represented by this object in the current time zone. The date information
* from this object is also used to determine whether or not daylight savings
* time is in effect. For example, the offset for the UK would be 0 if the
* month of the date object was January, and 1 if the month was August.
*
* @deprecated use
* Calendar.get(Calendar.ZONE_OFFSET)+Calendar.get(Calendar.DST_OFFSET)
* instead.
* @return The time zone offset in minutes of the local time zone
* relative to UTC. The time represented by this object is used to
* determine if we should use daylight savings.
*/
public int getTimezoneOffset()
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
return - (cal.get(Calendar.ZONE_OFFSET)
+ cal.get(Calendar.DST_OFFSET)) / (60 * 1000);
}
/**
* Sets the time which this object should represent.
*
* @param time the time in milliseconds since the epoch.
*/
public void setTime(long time)
{
this.time = time;
}
/**
* Tests if this date is after the specified date.
*
* @param when the other date
* @return true, if the date represented by this object is
* strictly later than the time represented by when.
*/
public boolean after(Date when)
{
return time > when.time;
}
/**
* Tests if this date is before the specified date.
*
* @param when the other date
* @return true, if the date represented by when is strictly later
* than the time represented by this object.
*/
public boolean before(Date when)
{
return time < when.time;
}
/**
* Compares two dates for equality.
*
* @param obj the object to compare.
* @return true, if obj is a Date object and the time represented
* by obj is exactly the same as the time represented by this
* object.
*/
public boolean equals(Object obj)
{
return (obj instanceof Date && time == ((Date) obj).time);
}
/**
* Compares two dates.
*
* @param when the other date.
* @return 0, if the date represented
* by obj is exactly the same as the time represented by this
* object, a negative if this Date is before the other Date, and
* a positive value otherwise.
*/
public int compareTo(Date when)
{
return (time < when.time) ? -1 : (time == when.time) ? 0 : 1;
}
/**
* Computes the hash code of this Date
as the
* XOR of the most significant and the least significant
* 32 bits of the 64 bit milliseconds value.
*
* @return the hash code.
*/
public int hashCode()
{
return (int) time ^ (int) (time >>> 32);
}
/**
* * Returns a string representation of this date using * the following date format: *
*
* day mon dd hh:mm:ss zz yyyy
*
where the fields used here are: *
day
-- the day of the week
* (Sunday through to Saturday).
* mon
-- the month (Jan to Dec).
* dd
-- the day of the month
* as two decimal digits (01 to 31).
* hh
-- the hour of the day
* as two decimal digits in 24-hour clock notation
* (01 to 23).
* mm
-- the minute of the day
* as two decimal digits (01 to 59).
* ss
-- the second of the day
* as two decimal digits (01 to 61).
* zz
-- the time zone information if available.
* The possible time zones used include the abbreviations
* recognised by parse()
(e.g. GMT, CET, etc.)
* and may reflect the fact that daylight savings time is in
* effect. The empty string is used if there is no time zone
* information.
* yyyy
-- the year as four decimal digits.
*
* The DateFormat
class should now be
* preferred over using this method.
*
Date
object.
*
* @deprecated Use DateFormat.format(Date)
* @return A locale-dependent string representation.
* @see #parse(String)
* @see DateFormat
*/
public String toLocaleString()
{
return java.text.DateFormat.getInstance().format(this);
}
/**
*
* Returns a string representation of this Date
* object using GMT rather than the local timezone.
* The following date format is used:
*
* d mon yyyy hh:mm:ss GMT
*
where the fields used here are: *
d
-- the day of the month
* as one or two decimal digits (1 to 31).
* mon
-- the month (Jan to Dec).
* yyyy
-- the year as four decimal digits.
* hh
-- the hour of the day
* as two decimal digits in 24-hour clock notation
* (01 to 23).
* mm
-- the minute of the day
* as two decimal digits (01 to 59).
* ss
-- the second of the day
* as two decimal digits (01 to 61).
* GMT
-- the literal string "GMT"
* indicating Greenwich Mean Time as opposed to
* the local timezone.
*
* Parses a String and returns the time, in milliseconds since the
* epoch, it represents. Most syntaxes are handled, including
* the IETF date standard "day, dd mon yyyy hh:mm:ss zz" (see
* toString()
for definitions of these fields).
* Standard U.S. time zone abbreviations are recognised, in
* addition to time zone offsets in positive or negative minutes.
* If a time zone is specified, the specified time is assumed to
* be in UTC and the appropriate conversion is applied, following
* parsing, to convert this to the local time zone. If no zone
* is specified, the time is assumed to already be in the local
* time zone.
*
* The method parses the string progressively from left to right.
* At the end of the parsing process, either a time is returned
* or an IllegalArgumentException
is thrown to signify
* failure. The ASCII characters A-Z, a-z, 0-9, and ',', '+', '-',
* ':' and '/' are the only characters permitted within the string,
* besides whitespace and characters enclosed within parantheses
* '(' and ')'.
*
* A sequence of consecutive digits are recognised as a number, * and interpreted as follows: *
Date
class is initialised.. Given a century,
* x, the year is assumed to be within the range x - 80 to x + 19. The value
* itself is then used as a match against the two last digits of one of these
* years. For example, take x to be 2004. A two-digit year is assumed to fall
* within the range x - 80 (1924) and x + 19 (2023). Thus, any intepreted value
* between 0 and 23 is assumed to be 2000 to 2023 and values between 24 and 99
* are taken as being 1924 to 1999. This only applies for the case of 2004.
* With a different year, the values will be interpreted differently. 2005
* will used 0 to 24 as 2000 to 2024 and 25 to 99 as 1925 to 1999, for example.
* This behaviour differs from that of SimpleDateFormat
and is
* time-dependent (a two-digit year will be interpreted differently depending
* on the time the code is run).
* * A sequence of consecutive alphabetic characters is recognised as a word, * and interpreted as follows, in a case-insentive fashion: *
Date
object and 1900.
*
* @return the year minus 1900 represented by this date object.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use get(Calendar.YEAR)
* instead. Note the 1900 difference in the year.
* @see Calendar
* @see #setYear(int)
*/
public int getYear()
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
return cal.get(Calendar.YEAR) - 1900;
}
/**
* Sets the year to the specified year, plus 1900. The other
* fields are only altered as required to match the same date
* and time in the new year. Usually, this will mean that
* the fields are not changed at all, but in the case of
* a leap day or leap second, the fields will change in
* relation to the existence of such an event in the new year.
* For example, if the date specifies February the 29th, 2000,
* then this will become March the 1st if the year is changed
* to 2001, as 2001 is not a leap year. Similarly, a seconds
* value of 60 or 61 may result in the seconds becoming 0 and
* the minute increasing by 1, if the new time does not include
* a leap second.
*
* @param year the year minus 1900.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use
* set(Calendar.YEAR, year) instead. Note about the 1900
* difference in year.
* @see #getYear()
* @see Calendar
*/
public void setYear(int year)
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
cal.set(Calendar.YEAR, 1900 + year);
time = cal.getTimeInMillis();
}
/**
* Returns the month represented by this Date
object,
* as a value between 0 (January) and 11 (December).
*
* @return the month represented by this date object (zero based).
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use get(Calendar.MONTH)
* instead.
* @see #setMonth(int)
* @see Calendar
*/
public int getMonth()
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
return cal.get(Calendar.MONTH);
}
/**
* Sets the month to the given value. The other
* fields are only altered as necessary to match
* the same date and time in the new month. In most
* cases, the other fields won't change at all. However,
* in the case of a shorter month or a leap second, values
* may be adjusted. For example, if the day of the month
* is currently 31, and the month value is changed from
* January (0) to September (8), the date will become
* October the 1st, as September only has 30 days. Similarly,
* a seconds value of 60 or 61 (a leap second) may result
* in the seconds value being reset to 0 and the minutes
* value being incremented by 1, if the new time does
* not include a leap second.
*
* @param month the month, with a zero-based index
* from January.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use
* set(Calendar.MONTH, month) instead.
* @see #getMonth()
* @see Calendar
*/
public void setMonth(int month)
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
cal.set(Calendar.MONTH, month);
time = cal.getTimeInMillis();
}
/**
* Returns the day of the month of this Date
* object, as a value between 0 and 31.
*
* @return the day of month represented by this date object.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use get(Calendar.DATE)
* instead.
* @see Calendar
* @see #setDate(int)
*/
public int getDate()
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
return cal.get(Calendar.DATE);
}
/**
* Sets the date to the given value. The other
* fields are only altered as necessary to match
* the same date and time on the new day of the month. In most
* cases, the other fields won't change at all. However,
* in the case of a leap second or the day being out of
* the range of the current month, values
* may be adjusted. For example, if the day of the month
* is currently 30 and the month is June, a new day of the
* month value of 31 will cause the month to change to July,
* as June only has 30 days . Similarly,
* a seconds value of 60 or 61 (a leap second) may result
* in the seconds value being reset to 0 and the minutes
* value being incremented by 1, if the new time does
* not include a leap second.
*
* @param date the date.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use
* set(Calendar.DATE, date) instead.
* @see Calendar
* @see #getDate()
*/
public void setDate(int date)
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
cal.set(Calendar.DATE, date);
time = cal.getTimeInMillis();
}
/**
* Returns the day represented by this Date
* object as an integer between 0 (Sunday) and 6 (Saturday).
*
* @return the day represented by this date object.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)
* instead.
* @see Calendar
*/
public int getDay()
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
// For Calendar, Sunday is 1. For Date, Sunday is 0.
return cal.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK) - 1;
}
/**
* Returns the hours represented by this Date
* object as an integer between 0 and 23.
*
* @return the hours represented by this date object.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY)
* instead.
* @see Calendar
* @see #setHours(int)
*/
public int getHours()
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
return cal.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY);
}
/**
* Sets the hours to the given value. The other
* fields are only altered as necessary to match
* the same date and time in the new hour. In most
* cases, the other fields won't change at all. However,
* in the case of a leap second, values
* may be adjusted. For example,
* a seconds value of 60 or 61 (a leap second) may result
* in the seconds value being reset to 0 and the minutes
* value being incremented by 1 if the new hour does
* not contain a leap second.
*
* @param hours the hours.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use
* set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, hours) instead.
* @see Calendar
* @see #getHours()
*/
public void setHours(int hours)
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
cal.set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, hours);
time = cal.getTimeInMillis();
}
/**
* Returns the number of minutes represented by the Date
* object, as an integer between 0 and 59.
*
* @return the minutes represented by this date object.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use get(Calendar.MINUTE)
* instead.
* @see Calendar
* @see #setMinutes(int)
*/
public int getMinutes()
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
return cal.get(Calendar.MINUTE);
}
/**
* Sets the minutes to the given value. The other
* fields are only altered as necessary to match
* the same date and time in the new minute. In most
* cases, the other fields won't change at all. However,
* in the case of a leap second, values
* may be adjusted. For example,
* a seconds value of 60 or 61 (a leap second) may result
* in the seconds value being reset to 0 and the minutes
* value being incremented by 1 if the new minute does
* not contain a leap second.
*
* @param minutes the minutes.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use
* set(Calendar.MINUTE, minutes) instead.
* @see Calendar
* @see #getMinutes()
*/
public void setMinutes(int minutes)
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
cal.set(Calendar.MINUTE, minutes);
time = cal.getTimeInMillis();
}
/**
* Returns the number of seconds represented by the Date
* object, as an integer between 0 and 61 (60 and 61 being leap seconds).
*
* @return the seconds represented by this date object.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use get(Calendar.SECOND)
* instead.
* @see Calendar
* @see #setSeconds(int)
*/
public int getSeconds()
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
return cal.get(Calendar.SECOND);
}
/**
* Sets the seconds to the given value. The other
* fields are only altered as necessary to match
* the same date and time in the new minute. In most
* cases, the other fields won't change at all. However,
* in the case of a leap second, values
* may be adjusted. For example, setting the
* seconds value to 60 or 61 (a leap second) may result
* in the seconds value being reset to 0 and the minutes
* value being incremented by 1, if the current time does
* not contain a leap second.
*
* @param seconds the seconds.
* @deprecated Use Calendar instead of Date, and use
* set(Calendar.SECOND, seconds) instead.
* @see Calendar
* @see #getSeconds()
*/
public void setSeconds(int seconds)
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTimeInMillis(time);
cal.set(Calendar.SECOND, seconds);
time = cal.getTimeInMillis();
}
/**
* Deserializes a Date
object from an
* input stream, setting the time (in milliseconds
* since the epoch) to the long value read from the
* stream.
*
* @param input the input stream.
* @throws IOException if an I/O error occurs in the stream.
* @throws ClassNotFoundException if the class of the
* serialized object could not be found.
*/
private void readObject(ObjectInputStream input)
throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException
{
input.defaultReadObject();
time = input.readLong();
}
/**
* Serializes a Date
object to an output stream,
* storing the time (in milliseconds since the epoch) as a long
* value in the stream.
*
* @serialdata A long value representing the offset from the epoch
* in milliseconds. This is the same value that is returned by the
* method getTime().
* @param output the output stream.
* @throws IOException if an I/O error occurs in the stream.
*/
private void writeObject(ObjectOutputStream output)
throws IOException
{
output.defaultWriteObject();
output.writeLong(time);
}
}