2004-11-07 Andrew John Hughes <gnu_andrew@member.fsf.org>
* java/util/Date.java Added missing documentation. From-SVN: r90225
This commit is contained in:
parent
426e7d289b
commit
6dd70904fb
2 changed files with 548 additions and 53 deletions
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@ -35,32 +35,82 @@ this exception to your version of the library, but you are not
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obligated to do so. If you do not wish to do so, delete this
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exception statement from your version. */
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package java.util;
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import java.io.IOException;
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import java.io.ObjectInputStream;
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import java.io.ObjectOutputStream;
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import java.io.Serializable;
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/**
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* <p>
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* This class represents a specific time in milliseconds since the epoch.
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* The epoch is 1970, January 1 00:00:00.0000 UTC.
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* </p>
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* <p>
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* <code>Date</code> is intended to reflect universal time coordinate (UTC),
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* but this depends on the underlying host environment. Most operating systems
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* don't handle the leap second, which occurs about once every year or
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* so. The leap second is added to the last minute of the day on either
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* the 30th of June or the 31st of December, creating a minute 61 seconds
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* in length.
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* </p>
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* <p>
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* The representations of the date fields are as follows:
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* <ul>
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* <li>
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* Years are specified as the difference between the year
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* and 1900. Thus, the final year used is equal to
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* 1900 + y, where y is the input value.
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* Months are represented using zero-based indexing,
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* making 0 January and 11 December.
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* Dates are represented with the usual values of
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* 1 through to 31.
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* Hours are represented in the twenty-four hour clock,
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* with integer values from 0 to 23. 12am is 0, and
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* 12pm is 12.
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* Minutes are again as usual, with values from 0 to 59.
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* Seconds are represented with the values 0 through to 61,
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* with 60 and 61 being leap seconds (as per the ISO C standard).
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* </li>
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* </ul>
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* </p>
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* <p>
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* Prior to JDK 1.1, this class was the sole class handling date and time
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* related functionality. However, this particular solution was not
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* amenable to internationalization. The new <code>Calendar</code>
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* class should now be used to handle dates and times, with <code>Date</code>
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* being used only for values in milliseconds since the epoch. The
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* <code>Calendar</code> class, and its concrete implementations, handle
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* the interpretation of these values into minutes, hours, days, months
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* and years. The formatting and parsing of dates is left to the
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* <code>DateFormat</code> class, which is able to handle the different
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* types of date format which occur in different locales.
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* </p>
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*
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* Date is intended to reflect universal time coordinate (UTC), but doesn't
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* handle the leap seconds.
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*
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* Prior to jdk 1.1 this class was the sole Time class and had also
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* calendar functionality. But this can't be localized, so a new Calendar
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* class was created, that you should use instead. The functions which
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* get or return a year, month, day etc. are all deprecated and shouldn't be
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* used. Use Calendar instead.
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*
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* @see Calendar
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* @see GregorianCalendar
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* @see java.text.DateFormat
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* @author Jochen Hoenicke
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* @author Per Bothner <bothner@cygnus.com>
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* @author Per Bothner (bothner@cygnus.com)
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* @author Andrew John Hughes (gnu_andrew@member.fsf.org)
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*/
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public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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public class Date
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implements Cloneable, Comparable, Serializable
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{
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/**
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* This is the serialization UID for this class
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* for compatability with Sun's JDK.
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*/
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private static final long serialVersionUID = 7523967970034938905L;
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@ -69,6 +119,17 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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*/
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private transient long time;
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/**
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* An array of week names used to map names to integer values.
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*/
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private static final String[] weekNames = { "Sun", "Mon", "Tue", "Wed",
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"Thu", "Fri", "Sat" };
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/**
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* An array of month names used to map names to integer values.
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*/
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private static final String[] monthNames = { "Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr",
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"May", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug",
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"Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec" };
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/**
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* Creates a new Date Object representing the current time.
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*/
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@ -79,6 +140,7 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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/**
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* Creates a new Date Object representing the given time.
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*
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* @param time the time in milliseconds since the epoch.
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*/
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public Date(long time)
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@ -88,8 +150,12 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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/**
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* Creates a new Date Object representing the given time.
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*
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* @deprecated use <code>new GregorianCalendar(year+1900, month,
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* day)</code> instead.
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* day)</code> instead.
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* @param year the difference between the required year and 1900.
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* @param month the month as a value between 0 and 11.
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* @param day the day as a value between 0 and 31.
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*/
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public Date(int year, int month, int day)
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{
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@ -98,8 +164,15 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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/**
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* Creates a new Date Object representing the given time.
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*
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* @deprecated use <code>new GregorianCalendar(year+1900, month,
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* day, hour, min)</code> instead.
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* day, hour, min)</code> instead.
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* @param year the difference between the required year and 1900.
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* @param month the month as a value between 0 and 11.
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* @param day the day as a value between 0 and 31.
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* @param hour the hour as a value between 0 and 23, in 24-hour
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* clock notation.
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* @param min the minute as a value between 0 and 59.
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*/
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public Date(int year, int month, int day, int hour, int min)
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{
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@ -110,8 +183,17 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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/**
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* Creates a new Date Object representing the given time.
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*
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* @deprecated use <code>new GregorianCalendar(year+1900, month,
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* day)</code> instead.
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* day, hour, min, sec)</code> instead.
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* @param year the difference between the required year and 1900.
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* @param month the month as a value between 0 and 11.
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* @param day the day as a value between 0 and 31.
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* @param hour the hour as a value between 0 and 23, in 24-hour
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* clock notation.
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* @param min the minute as a value between 0 and 59.
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* @param sec the second as a value between 0 and 61 (with 60
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* and 61 being leap seconds).
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*/
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public Date(int year, int month, int day, int hour, int min, int sec)
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{
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@ -131,6 +213,13 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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time = parse(s);
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}
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/**
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* Returns a copy of this <code>Date</code> object.
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*
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* @return a copy, or null if the object couldn't be
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* cloned.
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* @see Object#clone()
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*/
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public Object clone()
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{
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try
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@ -144,8 +233,22 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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}
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/**
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* @deprecated Use Calendar with a UTC TimeZone instead.
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* @return the time in millis since the epoch.
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* Returns the number of milliseconds since the epoch
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* specified by the given arguments. The arguments are
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* interpreted relative to UTC rather than the local
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* time zone.
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*
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* @deprecated Use <code>Calendar</code> with a UTC
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* <code>TimeZone</code> instead.
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* @param year the difference between the required year and 1900.
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* @param month the month as a value between 0 and 11.
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* @param day the day as a value between 0 and 31.
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* @param hour the hour as a value between 0 and 23, in 24-hour
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* clock notation.
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* @param min the minute as a value between 0 and 59.
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* @param sec the second as a value between 0 and 61 (with 60
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* and 61 being leap seconds).
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* @return the time in milliseconds since the epoch.
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*/
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public static long UTC(int year, int month, int date,
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int hrs, int min, int sec)
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}
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/**
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* Gets the time represented by this Object
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* Gets the time represented by this object.
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*
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* @return the time in milliseconds since the epoch.
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*/
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public long getTime()
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}
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/**
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* Returns the number of minutes offset used with UTC to give the time
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* represented by this object in the current time zone. The date information
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* from this object is also used to determine whether or not daylight savings
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* time is in effect. For example, the offset for the UK would be 0 if the
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* month of the date object was January, and 1 if the month was August.
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*
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* @deprecated use
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* Calendar.get(Calendar.ZONE_OFFSET)+Calendar.get(Calendar.DST_OFFSET)
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* <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.ZONE_OFFSET)+Calendar.get(Calendar.DST_OFFSET)</code>
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* instead.
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* @return The time zone offset in minutes of the local time zone
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* relative to UTC. The time represented by this object is used to
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}
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/**
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* Sets the time which this Object should represented.
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* @param time the time in milliseconds since the epoch. */
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* Sets the time which this object should represent.
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*
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* @param time the time in milliseconds since the epoch.
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*/
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public void setTime(long time)
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{
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this.time = time;
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/**
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* Tests if this date is after the specified date.
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*
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* @param when the other date
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* @return true, if the date represented by this Object is
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* @return true, if the date represented by this object is
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* strictly later than the time represented by when.
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*/
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public boolean after(Date when)
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@ -203,6 +316,7 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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/**
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* Tests if this date is before the specified date.
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*
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* @param when the other date
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* @return true, if the date represented by when is strictly later
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* than the time represented by this object.
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@ -214,8 +328,9 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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/**
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* Compares two dates for equality.
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*
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* @param obj the object to compare.
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* @return true, if obj is a Date object and the date represented
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* @return true, if obj is a Date object and the time represented
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* by obj is exactly the same as the time represented by this
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* object.
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*/
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@ -226,6 +341,7 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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/**
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* Compares two dates.
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*
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* @param when the other date.
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* @return 0, if the date represented
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* by obj is exactly the same as the time represented by this
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}
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/**
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* Compares this Date to another. This behaves like
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* <code>compareTo(Date)</code>, but it may throw a
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* <code>ClassCastException</code>
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* Compares this Date to another object. This behaves like
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* <code>compareTo(Date)</code>, but it takes a generic object
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* and throws a <code>ClassCastException</code> if obj is
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* not a <code>Date</code>.
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*
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* @param obj the other date.
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* @return 0, if the date represented
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* by obj is exactly the same as the time represented by this
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@ -253,18 +371,73 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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return compareTo((Date) obj);
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}
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/**
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* Computes the hash code of this <code>Date</code> as the
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* XOR of the most significant and the least significant
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* 32 bits of the 64 bit milliseconds value.
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*
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* @return the hash code.
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*/
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public int hashCode()
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{
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return (int) time ^ (int) (time >>> 32);
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}
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private static final String[] weekNames = { "Sun", "Mon", "Tue", "Wed",
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"Thu", "Fri", "Sat" };
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private static final String[] monthNames = { "Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr",
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"May", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug",
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"Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec" };
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/**
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* <p>
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* Returns a string representation of this date using
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* the following date format:
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* </p>
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* <p>
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* <code>day mon dd hh:mm:ss zz yyyy</code>
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* </p>
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* <p>where the fields used here are:
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* <ul>
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* <li>
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* <code>day</code> -- the day of the week
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* (Sunday through to Saturday).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>mon</code> -- the month (Jan to Dec).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>dd</code> -- the day of the month
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* as two decimal digits (01 to 31).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>hh</code> -- the hour of the day
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* as two decimal digits in 24-hour clock notation
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* (01 to 23).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>mm</code> -- the minute of the day
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* as two decimal digits (01 to 59).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>ss</code> -- the second of the day
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* as two decimal digits (01 to 61).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>zz</code> -- the time zone information if available.
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* The possible time zones used include the abbreviations
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* recognised by <code>parse()</code> (e.g. GMT, CET, etc.)
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* and may reflect the fact that daylight savings time is in
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* effect. The empty string is used if there is no time zone
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* information.
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>yyyy</code> -- the year as four decimal digits.
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* </li>
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* </ul>
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* <p>
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* The <code>DateFormat</code> class should now be
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* preferred over using this method.
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* </p>
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*
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* @return A string of the form 'day mon dd hh:mm:ss zz yyyy'
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* @see #parse(String)
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* @see DateFormat
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*/
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public String toString()
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{
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Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
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@ -286,16 +459,66 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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year.substring(year.length() - 4);
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}
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/** Format this object in a locale-specific way.
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/**
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* Returns a locale-dependent string representation of this
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* <code>Date</code> object.
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*
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* @deprecated Use DateFormat.format(Date)
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* @return A locale-dependent string representation.
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* @see #parse(String)
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* @see DateFormat
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*/
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public String toLocaleString()
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{
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return java.text.DateFormat.getInstance().format(this);
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}
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/** Format this object in a standard format in the GMT timezone.
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/**
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* <p>
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* Returns a string representation of this <code>Date</code>
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* object using GMT rather than the local timezone.
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* The following date format is used:
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* </p>
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* <p>
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* <code>d mon yyyy hh:mm:ss GMT</code>
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* </p>
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* <p>where the fields used here are:
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* <ul>
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* <li>
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* <code>d</code> -- the day of the month
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* as one or two decimal digits (1 to 31).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>mon</code> -- the month (Jan to Dec).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>yyyy</code> -- the year as four decimal digits.
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>hh</code> -- the hour of the day
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* as two decimal digits in 24-hour clock notation
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* (01 to 23).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>mm</code> -- the minute of the day
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* as two decimal digits (01 to 59).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>ss</code> -- the second of the day
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* as two decimal digits (01 to 61).
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* </li>
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* <li>
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* <code>GMT</code> -- the literal string "GMT"
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* indicating Greenwich Mean Time as opposed to
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* the local timezone.
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* </li>
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* </ul>
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*
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* @deprecated Use DateFormat.format(Date) with a GMT TimeZone.
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* @return A string of the form 'd mon yyyy hh:mm:ss GMT' using
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* GMT as opposed to the local timezone.
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* @see #parse(String)
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* @see DateFormat
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*/
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public String toGMTString()
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{
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@ -304,6 +527,14 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
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return format.format(this);
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}
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/**
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* Parses the time zone string.
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*
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* @param tok The token containing the time zone.
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* @param sign The sign (+ or -) used by the time zone.
|
||||
* @return An integer representing the number of minutes offset
|
||||
* from GMT for the time zone.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
private static int parseTz(String tok, char sign)
|
||||
throws IllegalArgumentException
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -328,6 +559,14 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
return sign == '-' ? -num : num;
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Parses the month string.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* @param tok the token containing the month.
|
||||
* @return An integer between 0 and 11, representing
|
||||
* a month from January (0) to December (11),
|
||||
* or -1 if parsing failed.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
private static int parseMonth(String tok)
|
||||
{
|
||||
// Initialize strings for month names.
|
||||
|
@ -346,6 +585,12 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
return -1;
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Parses the day of the week string.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* @param tok the token containing the day of the week.
|
||||
* @return true if the token was parsed successfully.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
private static boolean parseDayOfWeek(String tok)
|
||||
{
|
||||
// Initialize strings for days of the week names.
|
||||
|
@ -362,9 +607,124 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
return false;
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/** Parse a String and return the time it represents.
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* <p>
|
||||
* 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
|
||||
* <code>toString()</code> 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.
|
||||
* </p>
|
||||
* <p>
|
||||
* The method parses the string progressively from left to right.
|
||||
* At the end of the parsing process, either a time is returned
|
||||
* or an <code>IllegalArgumentException</code> 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 ')'.
|
||||
* </p>
|
||||
* <p>
|
||||
* A sequence of consecutive digits are recognised as a number,
|
||||
* and interpreted as follows:
|
||||
* <ul>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* A number preceded by a sign (+ or -) is taken to be a time zone
|
||||
* offset. The time zone offset can be specified in either hours
|
||||
* or minutes. The former is assumed if the number is less than 24.
|
||||
* Otherwise, the offset is assumed to be in minutes. A - indicates
|
||||
* a time zone west of GMT, while a + represents a time zone to the
|
||||
* east of GMT. The time zones are always assumed to be relative
|
||||
* to GMT, and a (redundant) specification of this can be included
|
||||
* with the time zone. For example, '-9', 'utc-9' and 'GMT-9' all
|
||||
* represent a time zone nine hours west of GMT. Similarly,
|
||||
* '+4', 'ut+4' and 'UTC+4' all give 4 hours east of GMT.
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* A number equal to or greater than 70 is regarded as a year specification.
|
||||
* Values lower than 70 are only assumed to indicate a year if both the
|
||||
* day of the month and the month itself have already been recognised.
|
||||
* Year values less than 100 are interpreted as being relative to the current
|
||||
* century when the <code>Date</code> 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 <code>SimpleDateFormat</code> and is
|
||||
* time-dependent (a two-digit year will be interpreted differently depending
|
||||
* on the time the code is run).
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* Numbers followed by a colon are interpreted by first an hour, and then
|
||||
* as a minute, once an hour has been found.
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* Numbers followed by a slash are regarded first as a month, and then as
|
||||
* a day of the month once the month has been found. This follows the
|
||||
* U.S. date format of mm/dd, rather than the European dd/mm. Months
|
||||
* are converted to the recognised value - 1 before storage, in order
|
||||
* to put the number within the range 0 to 11.
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* Numbers followed by commas, whitespace, hyphens or the end of the string
|
||||
* are interpreted in the following order: hour, minute, second, day of month.
|
||||
* The first type not already recognised in the current string being parsed is
|
||||
* assumed.
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* </ul>
|
||||
* </p>
|
||||
* <p>
|
||||
* A sequence of consecutive alphabetic characters is recognised as a word,
|
||||
* and interpreted as follows, in a case-insentive fashion:
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* The characters 'AM' or 'PM' restrict the hour value to a value between 0
|
||||
* and 12. In the latter case, 12 is added to the hour value before storage.
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* Any words which match any prefix of one of the days of the week ('Monday',
|
||||
* 'Tuesday', 'Wednesday', 'Thursday', 'Friday', 'Saturday' and 'Sunday'),
|
||||
* are simply ignored.
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* Any words which match any prefix of one of the months of the year ('January',
|
||||
* 'February', 'March', 'April', 'May', 'June', 'July', 'August', 'September',
|
||||
* 'October', 'November', 'December') are recognised and interpreted as the
|
||||
* appropriate value between 0 and 11. The first match made against a
|
||||
* month is the one used, in the order specified here. For example, 'Ma' is
|
||||
* intepreted as 'March' (2) and not as 'May' (4). Similarly, 'Ju' is 'June',
|
||||
* and not 'July'.
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* The words 'GMT', 'UT' and 'UTC' are interpreted as specifying UTC as the
|
||||
* time zone in use for this date.
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* <li>
|
||||
* The word pairs 'EST'/'EDT', 'CST'/'CDT', 'MST'/'MDT' and 'PST'/'PDT' are
|
||||
* interpreted as the appropriate U.S. time zone abbreviation. Each pair
|
||||
* is the standard and daylight savings time zone specification, respectively,
|
||||
* for each zone within the U.S, these being Eastern Standard/Daylight Time
|
||||
* (-5), Central Standard/Daylight Time (-6), Mountain Standard/Daylight Time
|
||||
* (-7) and Pacific Standard/Daylight Time (-8).
|
||||
* </li>
|
||||
* </ul>
|
||||
*
|
||||
* @param s The String to parse.
|
||||
* @return The time in milliseconds since the epoch.
|
||||
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the string fails to parse.
|
||||
* @deprecated Use DateFormat.parse(String)
|
||||
* @see #toString()
|
||||
* @see SimpleDateFormat
|
||||
*/
|
||||
public static long parse(String string)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -578,9 +938,14 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Returns the difference between the year represented by this
|
||||
* <code>Date</code> 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 about the 1900 difference in year.
|
||||
* instead. Note the 1900 difference in the year.
|
||||
* @see Calendar
|
||||
* @see #setYear(int)
|
||||
*/
|
||||
public int getYear()
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -590,11 +955,25 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Sets the year to year minus 1900, not changing the other fields.
|
||||
* 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)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -605,9 +984,14 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Returns the month represented by this <code>Date</code> 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()
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -617,10 +1001,26 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Sets the month to the given value, not changing the other fields.
|
||||
* @param month the month, zero based.
|
||||
* 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.
|
||||
* set(Calendar.MONTH, month) instead.
|
||||
* @see #getMonth()
|
||||
* @see Calendar
|
||||
*/
|
||||
public void setMonth(int month)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -631,9 +1031,14 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Returns the day of the month of this <code>Date</code>
|
||||
* 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()
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -643,10 +1048,26 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Sets the date to the given value, not changing the other fields.
|
||||
* 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)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -657,9 +1078,13 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Returns the day represented by this <code>Date</code>
|
||||
* 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()
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -670,9 +1095,14 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Returns the hours represented by this <code>Date</code>
|
||||
* 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()
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -682,10 +1112,22 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Sets the hours to the given value, not changing the other fields.
|
||||
* 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.
|
||||
* set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, hours) instead.
|
||||
* @see Calendar
|
||||
* @see #getHours()
|
||||
*/
|
||||
public void setHours(int hours)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -696,9 +1138,14 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Returns the number of minutes represented by the <code>Date</code>
|
||||
* 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()
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -708,10 +1155,22 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Sets the minutes to the given value, not changing the other fields.
|
||||
* 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)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -722,9 +1181,14 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Returns the number of seconds represented by the <code>Date</code>
|
||||
* 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()
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -734,10 +1198,22 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Sets the seconds to the given value, not changing the other fields.
|
||||
* 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.
|
||||
* set(Calendar.SECOND, seconds) instead.
|
||||
* @see Calendar
|
||||
* @see #getSeconds()
|
||||
*/
|
||||
public void setSeconds(int seconds)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
@ -748,25 +1224,39 @@ public class Date implements Cloneable, Comparable, java.io.Serializable
|
|||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Reads an Object from the stream.
|
||||
* Deserializes a <code>Date</code> 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(java.io.ObjectInputStream input)
|
||||
throws java.io.IOException, ClassNotFoundException
|
||||
private void readObject(ObjectInputStream input)
|
||||
throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException
|
||||
{
|
||||
input.defaultReadObject();
|
||||
time = input.readLong();
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* Writes an Object to the stream.
|
||||
* Serializes a <code>Date</code> 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(java.io.ObjectOutputStream output)
|
||||
throws java.io.IOException
|
||||
private void writeObject(ObjectOutputStream output)
|
||||
throws IOException
|
||||
{
|
||||
output.defaultWriteObject();
|
||||
output.writeLong(time);
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Add table
Add a link
Reference in a new issue