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java.lang.Objectorg.threeten.bp.jdk8.DefaultInterfaceTemporalAccessor
org.threeten.bp.jdk8.DefaultInterfaceTemporal
org.threeten.bp.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime<D>
D - the date typepublic abstract class ChronoLocalDateTime<D extends ChronoLocalDate>
A date-time without a time-zone in an arbitrary chronology, intended for advanced globalization use cases.
Most applications should declare method signatures, fields and variables
as LocalDateTime, not this interface.
A ChronoLocalDateTime is the abstract representation of a local date-time
where the Chronology chronology, or calendar system, is pluggable.
The date-time is defined in terms of fields expressed by TemporalField,
where most common implementations are defined in ChronoField.
The chronology defines how the calendar system operates and the meaning of
the standard fields.
LocalDateTime rather than this
interface, even in the case where the application needs to deal with multiple
calendar systems. The rationale for this is explored in detail in ChronoLocalDate.
Ensure that the discussion in ChronoLocalDate has been read and understood
before using this interface.
In JDK 8, this is an interface with default methods. Since there are no default methods in JDK 7, an abstract class is used.
| Constructor Summary | |
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ChronoLocalDateTime()
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| Method Summary | ||
|---|---|---|
Temporal |
adjustInto(Temporal temporal)
Adjusts the specified temporal object. |
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abstract ChronoZonedDateTime<D> |
atZone(ZoneId zone)
Combines this time with a time-zone to create a ChronoZonedDateTime. |
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int |
compareTo(ChronoLocalDateTime<?> other)
Compares this date-time to another date-time, including the chronology. |
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boolean |
equals(Object obj)
Checks if this date-time is equal to another date-time, including the chronology. |
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String |
format(DateTimeFormatter formatter)
Formats this date-time using the specified formatter. |
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static ChronoLocalDateTime<?> |
from(TemporalAccessor temporal)
Obtains an instance of ChronoLocalDateTime from a temporal object. |
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Chronology |
getChronology()
Gets the chronology of this date-time. |
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int |
hashCode()
A hash code for this date-time. |
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boolean |
isAfter(ChronoLocalDateTime<?> other)
Checks if this date-time is after the specified date-time ignoring the chronology. |
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boolean |
isBefore(ChronoLocalDateTime<?> other)
Checks if this date-time is before the specified date-time ignoring the chronology. |
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boolean |
isEqual(ChronoLocalDateTime<?> other)
Checks if this date-time is equal to the specified date-time ignoring the chronology. |
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ChronoLocalDateTime<D> |
minus(long amountToSubtract,
TemporalUnit unit)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with the specified period subtracted. |
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ChronoLocalDateTime<D> |
minus(TemporalAmount amount)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with an amount subtracted. |
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abstract ChronoLocalDateTime<D> |
plus(long amountToAdd,
TemporalUnit unit)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with the specified period added. |
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ChronoLocalDateTime<D> |
plus(TemporalAmount amount)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with an amount added. |
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query(TemporalQuery<R> query)
Queries this date-time. |
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static Comparator<ChronoLocalDateTime<?>> |
timeLineOrder()
Gets a comparator that compares ChronoLocalDateTime in
time-line order ignoring the chronology. |
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long |
toEpochSecond(ZoneOffset offset)
Converts this date-time to the number of seconds from the epoch of 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. |
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Instant |
toInstant(ZoneOffset offset)
Converts this date-time to an Instant. |
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abstract D |
toLocalDate()
Gets the local date part of this date-time. |
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abstract LocalTime |
toLocalTime()
Gets the local time part of this date-time. |
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String |
toString()
Outputs this date-time as a String. |
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ChronoLocalDateTime<D> |
with(TemporalAdjuster adjuster)
Returns an adjusted object of the same type as this object with the adjustment made. |
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abstract ChronoLocalDateTime<D> |
with(TemporalField field,
long newValue)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with the specified field altered. |
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| Methods inherited from class org.threeten.bp.jdk8.DefaultInterfaceTemporalAccessor |
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get, range |
| Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object |
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clone, finalize, getClass, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, wait |
| Methods inherited from interface org.threeten.bp.temporal.Temporal |
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isSupported, until |
| Methods inherited from interface org.threeten.bp.temporal.TemporalAccessor |
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get, getLong, isSupported, range |
| Constructor Detail |
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public ChronoLocalDateTime()
| Method Detail |
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public static Comparator<ChronoLocalDateTime<?>> timeLineOrder()
ChronoLocalDateTime in
time-line order ignoring the chronology.
This comparator differs from the comparison in compareTo(org.threeten.bp.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime>) in that it
only compares the underlying date-time and not the chronology.
This allows dates in different calendar systems to be compared based
on the position of the date-time on the local time-line.
The underlying comparison is equivalent to comparing the epoch-day and nano-of-day.
isAfter(org.threeten.bp.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime>),
isBefore(org.threeten.bp.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime>),
isEqual(org.threeten.bp.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime>)public static ChronoLocalDateTime<?> from(TemporalAccessor temporal)
ChronoLocalDateTime from a temporal object.
This obtains a local date-time based on the specified temporal.
A TemporalAccessor represents an arbitrary set of date and time information,
which this factory converts to an instance of ChronoLocalDateTime.
The conversion extracts and combines the chronology and the date-time
from the temporal object. The behavior is equivalent to using
Chronology.localDateTime(TemporalAccessor) with the extracted chronology.
Implementations are permitted to perform optimizations such as accessing
those fields that are equivalent to the relevant objects.
This method matches the signature of the functional interface TemporalQuery
allowing it to be used as a query via method reference, ChronoLocalDateTime::from.
temporal - the temporal object to convert, not null
DateTimeException - if unable to convert to a ChronoLocalDateTimeChronology.localDateTime(TemporalAccessor)public Chronology getChronology()
The Chronology represents the calendar system in use.
The era and other fields in ChronoField are defined by the chronology.
public abstract D toLocalDate()
This returns a local date with the same year, month and day as this date-time.
public abstract LocalTime toLocalTime()
This returns a local time with the same hour, minute, second and nanosecond as this date-time.
public ChronoLocalDateTime<D> with(TemporalAdjuster adjuster)
Temporal
This adjusts this date-time according to the rules of the specified adjuster.
A simple adjuster might simply set the one of the fields, such as the year field.
A more complex adjuster might set the date to the last day of the month.
A selection of common adjustments is provided in TemporalAdjusters.
These include finding the "last day of the month" and "next Wednesday".
The adjuster is responsible for handling special cases, such as the varying
lengths of month and leap years.
Some example code indicating how and why this method is used:
date = date.with(Month.JULY); // most key classes implement TemporalAdjuster date = date.with(lastDayOfMonth()); // static import from TemporalAdjusters date = date.with(next(WEDNESDAY)); // static import from TemporalAdjusters and DayOfWeek
with in interface Temporalwith in class DefaultInterfaceTemporaladjuster - the adjuster to use, not null
public abstract ChronoLocalDateTime<D> with(TemporalField field,
long newValue)
Temporal
This returns a new object based on this one with the value for the specified field changed.
For example, on a LocalDate, this could be used to set the year, month or day-of-month.
The returned object will have the same observable type as this object.
In some cases, changing a field is not fully defined. For example, if the target object is a date representing the 31st January, then changing the month to February would be unclear. In cases like this, the field is responsible for resolving the result. Typically it will choose the previous valid date, which would be the last valid day of February in this example.
ChronoField.
If the field is supported, then the adjustment must be performed.
If unsupported, then a DateTimeException must be thrown.
If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method
is obtained by invoking TemporalField.adjustInto(Temporal, long)
passing this as the first argument.
Implementations must not alter either this object or the specified temporal object. Instead, an adjusted copy of the original must be returned. This provides equivalent, safe behavior for immutable and mutable implementations.
with in interface Temporalfield - the field to set in the result, not nullnewValue - the new value of the field in the result
public ChronoLocalDateTime<D> plus(TemporalAmount amount)
Temporal
This adjusts this temporal, adding according to the rules of the specified amount.
The amount is typically a Period but may be any other type implementing
the TemporalAmount interface, such as Duration.
Some example code indicating how and why this method is used:
date = date.plus(period); // add a Period instance date = date.plus(duration); // add a Duration instance date = date.plus(workingDays(6)); // example user-written workingDays method
Note that calling plus followed by minus is not guaranteed to
return the same date-time.
plus in interface Temporalplus in class DefaultInterfaceTemporalamount - the amount to add, not null
public abstract ChronoLocalDateTime<D> plus(long amountToAdd,
TemporalUnit unit)
Temporal
This method returns a new object based on this one with the specified period added.
For example, on a LocalDate, this could be used to add a number of years, months or days.
The returned object will have the same observable type as this object.
In some cases, changing a field is not fully defined. For example, if the target object is a date representing the 31st January, then adding one month would be unclear. In cases like this, the field is responsible for resolving the result. Typically it will choose the previous valid date, which would be the last valid day of February in this example.
If the implementation represents a date-time that has boundaries, such as LocalTime,
then the permitted units must include the boundary unit, but no multiples of the boundary unit.
For example, LocalTime must accept DAYS but not WEEKS or MONTHS.
ChronoUnit.
If the unit is supported, then the addition must be performed.
If unsupported, then a DateTimeException must be thrown.
If the unit is not a ChronoUnit, then the result of this method
is obtained by invoking TemporalUnit.addTo(Temporal, long)
passing this as the first argument.
Implementations must not alter either this object or the specified temporal object. Instead, an adjusted copy of the original must be returned. This provides equivalent, safe behavior for immutable and mutable implementations.
plus in interface TemporalamountToAdd - the amount of the specified unit to add, may be negativeunit - the unit of the period to add, not null
public ChronoLocalDateTime<D> minus(TemporalAmount amount)
Temporal
This adjusts this temporal, subtracting according to the rules of the specified amount.
The amount is typically a Period but may be any other type implementing
the TemporalAmount interface, such as Duration.
Some example code indicating how and why this method is used:
date = date.minus(period); // subtract a Period instance date = date.minus(duration); // subtract a Duration instance date = date.minus(workingDays(6)); // example user-written workingDays method
Note that calling plus followed by minus is not guaranteed to
return the same date-time.
minus in interface Temporalminus in class DefaultInterfaceTemporalamount - the amount to subtract, not null
public ChronoLocalDateTime<D> minus(long amountToSubtract,
TemporalUnit unit)
Temporal
This method returns a new object based on this one with the specified period subtracted.
For example, on a LocalDate, this could be used to subtract a number of years, months or days.
The returned object will have the same observable type as this object.
In some cases, changing a field is not fully defined. For example, if the target object is a date representing the 31st March, then subtracting one month would be unclear. In cases like this, the field is responsible for resolving the result. Typically it will choose the previous valid date, which would be the last valid day of February in this example.
If the implementation represents a date-time that has boundaries, such as LocalTime,
then the permitted units must include the boundary unit, but no multiples of the boundary unit.
For example, LocalTime must accept DAYS but not WEEKS or MONTHS.
Implementations must not alter either this object or the specified temporal object. Instead, an adjusted copy of the original must be returned. This provides equivalent, safe behavior for immutable and mutable implementations.
minus in interface Temporalminus in class DefaultInterfaceTemporalamountToSubtract - the amount of the specified unit to subtract, may be negativeunit - the unit of the period to subtract, not null
public <R> R query(TemporalQuery<R> query)
TemporalAccessorThis queries this date-time using the specified query strategy object.
Queries are a key tool for extracting information from date-times. They exists to externalize the process of querying, permitting different approaches, as per the strategy design pattern. Examples might be a query that checks if the date is the day before February 29th in a leap year, or calculates the number of days to your next birthday.
The most common query implementations are method references, such as
LocalDate::from and ZoneId::from.
Further implementations are on TemporalQueries.
Queries may also be defined by applications.
public <R> R query(TemporalQuery<R> type) {
// only include an if statement if the implementation can return it
if (query == TemporalQueries.zoneId()) return // the ZoneId
if (query == TemporalQueries.chronology()) return // the Chrono
if (query == TemporalQueries.precision()) return // the precision
// call default method
return super.query(query);
}
query in interface TemporalAccessorquery in class DefaultInterfaceTemporalAccessorR - the type of the resultquery - the query to invoke, not null
public Temporal adjustInto(Temporal temporal)
TemporalAdjusterThis adjusts the specified temporal object using the logic encapsulated in the implementing class. Examples might be an adjuster that sets the date avoiding weekends, or one that sets the date to the last day of the month.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use Temporal.with(TemporalAdjuster):
// these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisAdjuster.adjustInto(temporal); temporal = temporal.with(thisAdjuster);It is recommended to use the second approach,
with(TemporalAdjuster),
as it is a lot clearer to read in code.
Temporal to
query the temporal object and perform the adjustment.
The returned object must have the same observable type as the input object
The input object must not be altered. Instead, an adjusted copy of the original must be returned. This provides equivalent, safe behavior for immutable and mutable temporal objects.
The input temporal object may be in a calendar system other than ISO.
Implementations may choose to document compatibility with other calendar systems,
or reject non-ISO temporal objects by querying the chronology.
This method may be called from multiple threads in parallel. It must be thread-safe when invoked.
adjustInto in interface TemporalAdjustertemporal - the temporal object to adjust, not null
public String format(DateTimeFormatter formatter)
This date-time will be passed to the formatter to produce a string.
The default implementation must behave as follows:
return formatter.format(this);
formatter - the formatter to use, not null
DateTimeException - if an error occurs during printingpublic abstract ChronoZonedDateTime<D> atZone(ZoneId zone)
ChronoZonedDateTime.
This returns a ChronoZonedDateTime formed from this date-time at the
specified time-zone. The result will match this date-time as closely as possible.
Time-zone rules, such as daylight savings, mean that not every local date-time
is valid for the specified zone, thus the local date-time may be adjusted.
The local date-time is resolved to a single instant on the time-line.
This is achieved by finding a valid offset from UTC/Greenwich for the local
date-time as defined by the rules of the zone ID.
In most cases, there is only one valid offset for a local date-time. In the case of an overlap, where clocks are set back, there are two valid offsets. This method uses the earlier offset typically corresponding to "summer".
In the case of a gap, where clocks jump forward, there is no valid offset. Instead, the local date-time is adjusted to be later by the length of the gap. For a typical one hour daylight savings change, the local date-time will be moved one hour later into the offset typically corresponding to "summer".
To obtain the later offset during an overlap, call
ChronoZonedDateTime.withLaterOffsetAtOverlap() on the result of this method.
zone - the time-zone to use, not null
public Instant toInstant(ZoneOffset offset)
Instant.
This combines this local date-time and the specified offset to form
an Instant.
offset - the offset to use for the conversion, not null
Instant representing the same instant, not nullpublic long toEpochSecond(ZoneOffset offset)
This combines this local date-time and the specified offset to calculate the epoch-second value, which is the number of elapsed seconds from 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. Instants on the time-line after the epoch are positive, earlier are negative.
offset - the offset to use for the conversion, not null
public int compareTo(ChronoLocalDateTime<?> other)
The comparison is based first on the underlying time-line date-time, then
on the chronology.
It is "consistent with equals", as defined by Comparable.
For example, the following is the comparator order:
2012-12-03T12:00 (ISO)2012-12-04T12:00 (ISO)2555-12-04T12:00 (ThaiBuddhist)2012-12-05T12:00 (ISO)If all the date-time objects being compared are in the same chronology, then the additional chronology stage is not required and only the local date-time is used.
compareTo in interface Comparable<ChronoLocalDateTime<?>>other - the other date-time to compare to, not null
public boolean isAfter(ChronoLocalDateTime<?> other)
This method differs from the comparison in compareTo(org.threeten.bp.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime>) in that it
only compares the underlying date-time and not the chronology.
This allows dates in different calendar systems to be compared based
on the time-line position.
other - the other date-time to compare to, not null
public boolean isBefore(ChronoLocalDateTime<?> other)
This method differs from the comparison in compareTo(org.threeten.bp.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime>) in that it
only compares the underlying date-time and not the chronology.
This allows dates in different calendar systems to be compared based
on the time-line position.
other - the other date-time to compare to, not null
public boolean isEqual(ChronoLocalDateTime<?> other)
This method differs from the comparison in compareTo(org.threeten.bp.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime>) in that it
only compares the underlying date and time and not the chronology.
This allows date-times in different calendar systems to be compared based
on the time-line position.
other - the other date-time to compare to, not null
public boolean equals(Object obj)
Compares this date-time with another ensuring that the date-time and chronology are the same.
equals in class Objectobj - the object to check, null returns false
public int hashCode()
hashCode in class Objectpublic String toString()
String.
The output will include the full local date-time and the chronology ID.
toString in class Object
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