I was just wondering if there is a need of TimeSpan in java.util
so that I can define how much hours,minutes and seconds are there in between these two times.
From this TimeSpan
we can have a time interval between two times. like
TimeSpan getTimeSpan( Date before, Date after ){...}
or
long timeSpan = System.currentTimeMillis();
// ... long job
timeSpan = System.currentTimeMillis() - timeSpan;
TimeSpan ts = new TimeSpan(timeSpan);
and with this TimeSpan
we can use it in SimpleDateFormat
.
SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm:ss");
format.format( timsSpan );
I am not sure if this is already been implemented in Java but yet undiscovered by me.
With JDK 8 date-time libraries in SDK has been enriched and you can use
Interval
from JodaTime will do..
A time interval represents a period of time between two instants. Intervals are inclusive of the start instant and exclusive of the end. The end instant is always greater than or equal to the start instant.
Intervals have a fixed millisecond duration. This is the difference between the start and end instants. The duration is represented separately by ReadableDuration. As a result, intervals are not comparable. To compare the length of two intervals, you should compare their durations.
An interval can also be converted to a ReadablePeriod. This represents the difference between the start and end points in terms of fields such as years and days.
Interval is thread-safe and immutable.
In Java 8 a proper time library has been added to the standard API (this is based heavily on JodaTime).
In it there are two classes that you can use to indicate a period:
Duration
which indicates a seconds or nanoseconds length of a timespan.Period
which indicates a more user-friendly difference, stored as 'x years and y months etc'.
A detailed explanation of the difference between them can be found in the Java tutorial
If you're on on Java 8 (or higher) or simply don't want to import JodaTime (the Author of JodaTime himself suggest migrating to java.time): Java 8 offers that functionality with Periods, see here for a tutorial: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/datetime/iso/period.html
Let me quote the Oracle tutorial here:
LocalDate today = LocalDate.now();
LocalDate birthday = LocalDate.of(1960, Month.JANUARY, 1);
Period p = Period.between(birthday, today);
long p2 = ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(birthday, today);
System.out.println("You are " + p.getYears() + " years, " + p.getMonths() +
" months, and " + p.getDays() +
" days old. (" + p2 + " days total)");
The code produces output similar to the following:
You are 53 years, 4 months, and 29 days old. (19508 days total)
If you are looking for an alternative lighter version, have a look at this library that I wrote to use in my own Android app. https://github.com/ashokgelal/samaya
Sorry, I don't have any documentation on its usage, but it is very similar to the counterpart .net Timespan class. Also, there are some unit tests which contains many examples on how to use it.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6581605/do-we-have-a-timespan-sort-of-class-in-java