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public interface Temporal
Framework-level interface defining read-write access to a temporal object, such as a date, time, offset or some combination of these.
This is the base interface type for date, time and offset objects that
are complete enough to be manipulated using plus and minus.
It is implemented by those classes that can provide and manipulate information
as fields or queries.
See TemporalAccessor for the read-only version of this interface.
Most date and time information can be represented as a number.
These are modeled using TemporalField with the number held using
a long to handle large values. Year, month and day-of-month are
simple examples of fields, but they also include instant and offsets.
See ChronoField for the standard set of fields.
Two pieces of date/time information cannot be represented by numbers,
the chronology and the time-zone.
These can be accessed via queries using
the static methods defined on TemporalQueries.
This interface is a framework-level interface that should not be widely
used in application code. Instead, applications should create and pass
around instances of concrete types, such as LocalDate.
There are many reasons for this, part of which is that implementations
of this interface may be in calendar systems other than ISO.
See ChronoLocalDate for a fuller discussion of the issues.
A class should implement this interface if it meets three criteria:
TemporalAccessor
Four examples make this clear:
LocalDate implements this interface as it represents a set of fields
that are contiguous from days to forever and require no external information to determine
the validity of each date. It is therefore able to implement plus/minus correctly.
LocalTime implements this interface as it represents a set of fields
that are contiguous from nanos to within days and require no external information to determine
validity. It is able to implement plus/minus correctly, by wrapping around the day.
MonthDay, the combination of month-of-year and day-of-month, does not implement
this interface. While the combination is contiguous, from days to months within years,
the combination does not have sufficient information to define the valid range of values
for day-of-month. As such, it is unable to implement plus/minus correctly.
Comparable.
| Method Summary | |
|---|---|
boolean |
isSupported(TemporalUnit unit)
Checks if the specified unit is supported. |
Temporal |
minus(long amountToSubtract,
TemporalUnit unit)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with the specified period subtracted. |
Temporal |
minus(TemporalAmount amount)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with an amount subtracted. |
Temporal |
plus(long amountToAdd,
TemporalUnit unit)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with the specified period added. |
Temporal |
plus(TemporalAmount amount)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with an amount added. |
long |
until(Temporal endTemporal,
TemporalUnit unit)
Calculates the period between this temporal and another temporal in terms of the specified unit. |
Temporal |
with(TemporalAdjuster adjuster)
Returns an adjusted object of the same type as this object with the adjustment made. |
Temporal |
with(TemporalField field,
long newValue)
Returns an object of the same type as this object with the specified field altered. |
| Methods inherited from interface org.threeten.bp.temporal.TemporalAccessor |
|---|
get, getLong, isSupported, query, range |
| Method Detail |
|---|
boolean isSupported(TemporalUnit unit)
This checks if the date-time can be queried for the specified unit.
If false, then calling the plus and minus
methods will throw an exception.
ChronoUnit.
If the field is supported, then true is returned, otherwise false
If the field is not a ChronoUnit, then the result of this method
is obtained by invoking TemporalUnit.isSupportedBy(Temporal)
passing this as the argument.
Implementations must not alter this object.
unit - the unit to check, null returns false
Temporal with(TemporalAdjuster adjuster)
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
adjuster - the adjuster to use, not null
DateTimeException - if unable to make the adjustment
ArithmeticException - if numeric overflow occurs
Temporal with(TemporalField field,
long newValue)
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.
field - the field to set in the result, not nullnewValue - the new value of the field in the result
DateTimeException - if the field cannot be set
ArithmeticException - if numeric overflow occursTemporal plus(TemporalAmount amount)
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.
amount - the amount to add, not null
DateTimeException - if the addition cannot be made
ArithmeticException - if numeric overflow occurs
Temporal plus(long amountToAdd,
TemporalUnit unit)
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.
amountToAdd - the amount of the specified unit to add, may be negativeunit - the unit of the period to add, not null
DateTimeException - if the unit cannot be added
ArithmeticException - if numeric overflow occursTemporal minus(TemporalAmount amount)
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.
amount - the amount to subtract, not null
DateTimeException - if the subtraction cannot be made
ArithmeticException - if numeric overflow occurs
Temporal minus(long amountToSubtract,
TemporalUnit unit)
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.
amountToSubtract - the amount of the specified unit to subtract, may be negativeunit - the unit of the period to subtract, not null
DateTimeException - if the unit cannot be subtracted
ArithmeticException - if numeric overflow occurs
long until(Temporal endTemporal,
TemporalUnit unit)
This calculates the period between two temporals in terms of a single unit.
The start and end points are this and the specified temporal.
The result will be negative if the end is before the start.
For example, the period in hours between two temporal objects can be
calculated using startTime.until(endTime, HOURS).
The calculation returns a whole number, representing the number of complete units between the two temporals. For example, the period in hours between the times 11:30 and 13:29 will only be one hour as it is one minute short of two hours.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use TemporalUnit.between(Temporal, Temporal):
// these two lines are equivalent between = thisUnit.between(start, end); between = start.until(end, thisUnit);The choice should be made based on which makes the code more readable.
For example, this method allows the number of days between two dates to be calculated:
long daysBetween = DAYS.between(start, end); // or alternatively long daysBetween = start.until(end, DAYS);
ChronoUnit.
A DateTimeException must be thrown for ChronoUnit
instances that are unsupported.
If the unit is not a ChronoUnit, then the result of this method
is obtained by invoking TemporalUnit.between(Temporal, Temporal)
passing this as the first argument and the input temporal as
the second argument.
In summary, implementations must behave in a manner equivalent to this code:
// check input temporal is the same type as this class
if (unit instanceof ChronoUnit) {
// if unit is supported, then calculate and return result
// else throw DateTimeException for unsupported units
}
return unit.between(this, endTemporal);
The target object must not be altered by this method.
endTemporal - the end temporal, of the same type as this object, not nullunit - the unit to measure the period in, not null
DateTimeException - if the period cannot be calculated
ArithmeticException - if numeric overflow occurs
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