I read some posts on formatting date on android, like this:
How do you format date and time in Android?
People suggest use android.text.format.DateForm
As far as I can tell, android.text.format.DateFormat
has some of the functionality from java.text.DateFormat
, some of the functionality from java.text.SimpleDateFormat
, and some extra functionality of its own.
Most notably:
getBestDateTimePattern
which picks a locale-appropriate format string that contains the elements specified with locale-appropriate ordering and punctuation.So, if you need a localized date/time format other than the three provided by java's DateFormat class, the android DateFormat class is the solution.
Less importantly, but an additional convenience: the android DateFormat methods can take a Calendar or long milliseconds directly, instead of requiring a Date object. I always prefer working with Calendar or long over Date. Also, it properly respects the timezone of the Calendar object -- whereas getting a Date from a Calendar and passing that along to the formatter loses the timezone information. (Nothing you can't get around via java DateFormat's setCalendar method, but it's nice to not have to.)
Finally, and least importantly, some of the methods of the Android DateFormat don't actually construct a formatter, you just construct a format string. All of this class's methods are static. The methods do that construct a DateFormat actually construct a java DateFormat!
How about some self-help here? Compare the APIs, read the JavaDocs and see for yourself: