A date-time without a time-zone in the ISO-8601 calendar system, such as 2007-12-03T10:15:30.
LocalDateTime is an immutable date-time object that represents a date-time,
often viewed as year-month-day-hour-minute-second. Other date and time fields,
such as day-of-year, day-of-week and week-of-year, can also be accessed.
Time is represented to nanosecond precision.
For example, the value 2nd October 2007 at 13:45.30.123456789
can be
stored in a LocalDateTime.
This class does not store or represent a time-zone. Instead, it is a description of the date, as used for birthdays, combined with the local time as seen on a wall clock. It cannot represent an instant on the time-line without additional information such as an offset or time-zone.
The ISO-8601 calendar system is the modern civil calendar system used today in most of the world. It is equivalent to the proleptic Gregorian calendar system, in which today's rules for leap years are applied for all time. For most applications written today, the ISO-8601 rules are entirely suitable. However, any application that makes use of historical dates, and requires them to be accurate will find the ISO-8601 approach unsuitable.
This is a value-based class; use of identity-sensitive operations (including reference equality (==), identity hash code, or synchronization) on instances of LocalDateTime may have unpredictable results and should be avoided. The equals method should be used for comparisons.
A date-time without a time-zone in the ISO-8601 calendar system, such as 2007-12-03T10:15:30. LocalDateTime is an immutable date-time object that represents a date-time, often viewed as year-month-day-hour-minute-second. Other date and time fields, such as day-of-year, day-of-week and week-of-year, can also be accessed. Time is represented to nanosecond precision. For example, the value `2nd October 2007 at 13:45.30.123456789` can be stored in a LocalDateTime. This class does not store or represent a time-zone. Instead, it is a description of the date, as used for birthdays, combined with the local time as seen on a wall clock. It cannot represent an instant on the time-line without additional information such as an offset or time-zone. The ISO-8601 calendar system is the modern civil calendar system used today in most of the world. It is equivalent to the proleptic Gregorian calendar system, in which today's rules for leap years are applied for all time. For most applications written today, the ISO-8601 rules are entirely suitable. However, any application that makes use of historical dates, and requires them to be accurate will find the ISO-8601 approach unsuitable. This is a value-based class; use of identity-sensitive operations (including reference equality (==), identity hash code, or synchronization) on instances of LocalDateTime may have unpredictable results and should be avoided. The equals method should be used for comparisons.
Static Constant.
The maximum supported LocalDateTime, '+999999999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999'.
This is the local date-time just before midnight at the end of the maximum date.
This combines LocalDate.MAX and LocalTime.MAX.
This could be used by an application as a far future
date-time.
type: java.time.LocalDateTime
Static Constant. The maximum supported LocalDateTime, '+999999999-12-31T23:59:59.999999999'. This is the local date-time just before midnight at the end of the maximum date. This combines LocalDate.MAX and LocalTime.MAX. This could be used by an application as a `far future` date-time. type: java.time.LocalDateTime
Static Constant.
The minimum supported LocalDateTime, '-999999999-01-01T00:00:00'.
This is the local date-time of midnight at the start of the minimum date.
This combines LocalDate.MIN and LocalTime.MIN.
This could be used by an application as a far past
date-time.
type: java.time.LocalDateTime
Static Constant. The minimum supported LocalDateTime, '-999999999-01-01T00:00:00'. This is the local date-time of midnight at the start of the minimum date. This combines LocalDate.MIN and LocalTime.MIN. This could be used by an application as a `far past` date-time. type: java.time.LocalDateTime
(*from temporal)
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime 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 LocalDateTime.
The conversion extracts and combines the LocalDate and the LocalTime from the temporal object. 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, LocalDateTime::from.
temporal - the temporal object to convert, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalAccessor
returns: the local date-time, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if unable to convert to a LocalDateTime
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime 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 LocalDateTime. The conversion extracts and combines the LocalDate and the LocalTime from the temporal object. 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, LocalDateTime::from. temporal - the temporal object to convert, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalAccessor` returns: the local date-time, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if unable to convert to a LocalDateTime
(*now)
(*now zone)
Obtains the current date-time from the system clock in the specified time-zone.
This will query the system clock to obtain the current date-time. Specifying the time-zone avoids dependence on the default time-zone.
Using this method will prevent the ability to use an alternate clock for testing because the clock is hard-coded.
zone - the zone ID to use, not null - java.time.ZoneId
returns: the current date-time using the system clock, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
Obtains the current date-time from the system clock in the specified time-zone. This will query the system clock to obtain the current date-time. Specifying the time-zone avoids dependence on the default time-zone. Using this method will prevent the ability to use an alternate clock for testing because the clock is hard-coded. zone - the zone ID to use, not null - `java.time.ZoneId` returns: the current date-time using the system clock, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime`
(*of date time)
(*of year month day-of-month hour minute)
(*of year month day-of-month hour minute second)
(*of year month day-of-month hour minute second nano-of-second)
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime from year, month, day, hour, minute, second and nanosecond.
This returns a LocalDateTime with the specified year, month, day-of-month, hour, minute, second and nanosecond. The day must be valid for the year and month, otherwise an exception will be thrown.
year - the year to represent, from MIN_YEAR to MAX_YEAR - int
month - the month-of-year to represent, not null - java.time.Month
day-of-month - the day-of-month to represent, from 1 to 31 - int
hour - the hour-of-day to represent, from 0 to 23 - int
minute - the minute-of-hour to represent, from 0 to 59 - int
second - the second-of-minute to represent, from 0 to 59 - int
nano-of-second - the nano-of-second to represent, from 0 to 999,999,999 - int
returns: the local date-time, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the value of any field is out of range, or if the day-of-month is invalid for the month-year
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime from year, month, day, hour, minute, second and nanosecond. This returns a LocalDateTime with the specified year, month, day-of-month, hour, minute, second and nanosecond. The day must be valid for the year and month, otherwise an exception will be thrown. year - the year to represent, from MIN_YEAR to MAX_YEAR - `int` month - the month-of-year to represent, not null - `java.time.Month` day-of-month - the day-of-month to represent, from 1 to 31 - `int` hour - the hour-of-day to represent, from 0 to 23 - `int` minute - the minute-of-hour to represent, from 0 to 59 - `int` second - the second-of-minute to represent, from 0 to 59 - `int` nano-of-second - the nano-of-second to represent, from 0 to 999,999,999 - `int` returns: the local date-time, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the value of any field is out of range, or if the day-of-month is invalid for the month-year
(*of-epoch-second epoch-second nano-of-second offset)
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime using seconds from the epoch of 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
This allows the epoch-second field to be converted to a local date-time. This is primarily intended for low-level conversions rather than general application usage.
epoch-second - the number of seconds from the epoch of 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z - long
nano-of-second - the nanosecond within the second, from 0 to 999,999,999 - int
offset - the zone offset, not null - java.time.ZoneOffset
returns: the local date-time, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported range, or if the nano-of-second is invalid
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime using seconds from the epoch of 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z. This allows the epoch-second field to be converted to a local date-time. This is primarily intended for low-level conversions rather than general application usage. epoch-second - the number of seconds from the epoch of 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z - `long` nano-of-second - the nanosecond within the second, from 0 to 999,999,999 - `int` offset - the zone offset, not null - `java.time.ZoneOffset` returns: the local date-time, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported range, or if the nano-of-second is invalid
(*of-instant instant zone)
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime from an Instant and zone ID.
This creates a local date-time based on the specified instant. First, the offset from UTC/Greenwich is obtained using the zone ID and instant, which is simple as there is only one valid offset for each instant. Then, the instant and offset are used to calculate the local date-time.
instant - the instant to create the date-time from, not null - java.time.Instant
zone - the time-zone, which may be an offset, not null - java.time.ZoneId
returns: the local date-time, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported range
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime from an Instant and zone ID. This creates a local date-time based on the specified instant. First, the offset from UTC/Greenwich is obtained using the zone ID and instant, which is simple as there is only one valid offset for each instant. Then, the instant and offset are used to calculate the local date-time. instant - the instant to create the date-time from, not null - `java.time.Instant` zone - the time-zone, which may be an offset, not null - `java.time.ZoneId` returns: the local date-time, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported range
(*parse text)
(*parse text formatter)
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime from a text string using a specific formatter.
The text is parsed using the formatter, returning a date-time.
text - the text to parse, not null - java.lang.CharSequence
formatter - the formatter to use, not null - java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter
returns: the parsed local date-time, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.format.DateTimeParseException - if the text cannot be parsed
Obtains an instance of LocalDateTime from a text string using a specific formatter. The text is parsed using the formatter, returning a date-time. text - the text to parse, not null - `java.lang.CharSequence` formatter - the formatter to use, not null - `java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter` returns: the parsed local date-time, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.format.DateTimeParseException - if the text cannot be parsed
(adjust-into this temporal)
Adjusts the specified temporal object to have the same date and time as this object.
This returns a temporal object of the same observable type as the input with the date and time changed to be the same as this.
The adjustment is equivalent to using Temporal.with(TemporalField, long) twice, passing ChronoField.EPOCH_DAY and ChronoField.NANO_OF_DAY as the fields.
In most cases, it is clearer to reverse the calling pattern by using Temporal.with(TemporalAdjuster):
// these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisLocalDateTime.adjustInto(temporal); temporal = temporal.with(thisLocalDateTime);
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
temporal - the target object to be adjusted, not null - java.time.temporal.Temporal
returns: the adjusted object, not null - java.time.temporal.Temporal
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if unable to make the adjustment
Adjusts the specified temporal object to have the same date and time as this object. This returns a temporal object of the same observable type as the input with the date and time changed to be the same as this. The adjustment is equivalent to using Temporal.with(TemporalField, long) twice, passing ChronoField.EPOCH_DAY and ChronoField.NANO_OF_DAY as the fields. In most cases, it is clearer to reverse the calling pattern by using Temporal.with(TemporalAdjuster): // these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisLocalDateTime.adjustInto(temporal); temporal = temporal.with(thisLocalDateTime); This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. temporal - the target object to be adjusted, not null - `java.time.temporal.Temporal` returns: the adjusted object, not null - `java.time.temporal.Temporal` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if unable to make the adjustment
(after? this other)
Checks if this date-time is after the specified date-time.
This checks to see if this date-time represents a point on the local time-line after the other date-time.
LocalDate a = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 6, 30, 12, 00); LocalDate b = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 7, 1, 12, 00); a.isAfter(b) == false a.isAfter(a) == false b.isAfter(a) == true
This method only considers the position of the two date-times on the local time-line. It does not take into account the chronology, or calendar system. This is different from the comparison in compareTo(ChronoLocalDateTime), but is the same approach as ChronoLocalDateTime.timeLineOrder().
other - the other date-time to compare to, not null - java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime
returns: true if this date-time is after the specified date-time - boolean
Checks if this date-time is after the specified date-time. This checks to see if this date-time represents a point on the local time-line after the other date-time. LocalDate a = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 6, 30, 12, 00); LocalDate b = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 7, 1, 12, 00); a.isAfter(b) == false a.isAfter(a) == false b.isAfter(a) == true This method only considers the position of the two date-times on the local time-line. It does not take into account the chronology, or calendar system. This is different from the comparison in compareTo(ChronoLocalDateTime), but is the same approach as ChronoLocalDateTime.timeLineOrder(). other - the other date-time to compare to, not null - `java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime` returns: true if this date-time is after the specified date-time - `boolean`
(at-offset this offset)
Combines this date-time with an offset to create an OffsetDateTime.
This returns an OffsetDateTime formed from this date-time at the specified offset. All possible combinations of date-time and offset are valid.
offset - the offset to combine with, not null - java.time.ZoneOffset
returns: the offset date-time formed from this date-time and the specified offset, not null - java.time.OffsetDateTime
Combines this date-time with an offset to create an OffsetDateTime. This returns an OffsetDateTime formed from this date-time at the specified offset. All possible combinations of date-time and offset are valid. offset - the offset to combine with, not null - `java.time.ZoneOffset` returns: the offset date-time formed from this date-time and the specified offset, not null - `java.time.OffsetDateTime`
(at-zone this zone)
Combines this date-time with a time-zone to create a ZonedDateTime.
This returns a ZonedDateTime 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 ZonedDateTime.withLaterOffsetAtOverlap() on the result of this method. To throw an exception when there is a gap or overlap, use ZonedDateTime.ofStrict(LocalDateTime, ZoneOffset, ZoneId).
zone - the time-zone to use, not null - java.time.ZoneId
returns: the zoned date-time formed from this date-time, not null - java.time.ZonedDateTime
Combines this date-time with a time-zone to create a ZonedDateTime. This returns a ZonedDateTime 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 ZonedDateTime.withLaterOffsetAtOverlap() on the result of this method. To throw an exception when there is a gap or overlap, use ZonedDateTime.ofStrict(LocalDateTime, ZoneOffset, ZoneId). zone - the time-zone to use, not null - `java.time.ZoneId` returns: the zoned date-time formed from this date-time, not null - `java.time.ZonedDateTime`
(before? this other)
Checks if this date-time is before the specified date-time.
This checks to see if this date-time represents a point on the local time-line before the other date-time.
LocalDate a = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 6, 30, 12, 00); LocalDate b = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 7, 1, 12, 00); a.isBefore(b) == true a.isBefore(a) == false b.isBefore(a) == false
This method only considers the position of the two date-times on the local time-line. It does not take into account the chronology, or calendar system. This is different from the comparison in compareTo(ChronoLocalDateTime), but is the same approach as ChronoLocalDateTime.timeLineOrder().
other - the other date-time to compare to, not null - java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime
returns: true if this date-time is before the specified date-time - boolean
Checks if this date-time is before the specified date-time. This checks to see if this date-time represents a point on the local time-line before the other date-time. LocalDate a = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 6, 30, 12, 00); LocalDate b = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 7, 1, 12, 00); a.isBefore(b) == true a.isBefore(a) == false b.isBefore(a) == false This method only considers the position of the two date-times on the local time-line. It does not take into account the chronology, or calendar system. This is different from the comparison in compareTo(ChronoLocalDateTime), but is the same approach as ChronoLocalDateTime.timeLineOrder(). other - the other date-time to compare to, not null - `java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime` returns: true if this date-time is before the specified date-time - `boolean`
(compare-to this other)
Compares this date-time to another date-time.
The comparison is primarily based on the date-time, from earliest to latest.
It is consistent with equals
, as defined by Comparable.
If all the date-times being compared are instances of LocalDateTime, then the comparison will be entirely based on the date-time. If some dates being compared are in different chronologies, then the chronology is also considered, see ChronoLocalDateTime.compareTo(java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime<?>).
other - the other date-time to compare to, not null - java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime
returns: the comparator value, negative if less, positive if greater - int
Compares this date-time to another date-time. The comparison is primarily based on the date-time, from earliest to latest. It is `consistent with equals`, as defined by Comparable. If all the date-times being compared are instances of LocalDateTime, then the comparison will be entirely based on the date-time. If some dates being compared are in different chronologies, then the chronology is also considered, see ChronoLocalDateTime.compareTo(java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime<?>). other - the other date-time to compare to, not null - `java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime` returns: the comparator value, negative if less, positive if greater - `int`
(equal? this other)
Checks if this date-time is equal to the specified date-time.
This checks to see if this date-time represents the same point on the local time-line as the other date-time.
LocalDate a = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 6, 30, 12, 00); LocalDate b = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 7, 1, 12, 00); a.isEqual(b) == false a.isEqual(a) == true b.isEqual(a) == false
This method only considers the position of the two date-times on the local time-line. It does not take into account the chronology, or calendar system. This is different from the comparison in compareTo(ChronoLocalDateTime), but is the same approach as ChronoLocalDateTime.timeLineOrder().
other - the other date-time to compare to, not null - java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime
returns: true if this date-time is equal to the specified date-time - boolean
Checks if this date-time is equal to the specified date-time. This checks to see if this date-time represents the same point on the local time-line as the other date-time. LocalDate a = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 6, 30, 12, 00); LocalDate b = LocalDateTime.of(2012, 7, 1, 12, 00); a.isEqual(b) == false a.isEqual(a) == true b.isEqual(a) == false This method only considers the position of the two date-times on the local time-line. It does not take into account the chronology, or calendar system. This is different from the comparison in compareTo(ChronoLocalDateTime), but is the same approach as ChronoLocalDateTime.timeLineOrder(). other - the other date-time to compare to, not null - `java.time.chrono.ChronoLocalDateTime` returns: true if this date-time is equal to the specified date-time - `boolean`
(equals this obj)
Checks if this date-time is equal to another date-time.
Compares this LocalDateTime with another ensuring that the date-time is the same. Only objects of type LocalDateTime are compared, other types return false.
obj - the object to check, null returns false - java.lang.Object
returns: true if this is equal to the other date-time - boolean
Checks if this date-time is equal to another date-time. Compares this LocalDateTime with another ensuring that the date-time is the same. Only objects of type LocalDateTime are compared, other types return false. obj - the object to check, null returns false - `java.lang.Object` returns: true if this is equal to the other date-time - `boolean`
(format this formatter)
Formats this date-time using the specified formatter.
This date-time will be passed to the formatter to produce a string.
formatter - the formatter to use, not null - java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter
returns: the formatted date-time string, not null - java.lang.String
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if an error occurs during printing
Formats this date-time using the specified formatter. This date-time will be passed to the formatter to produce a string. formatter - the formatter to use, not null - `java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter` returns: the formatted date-time string, not null - `java.lang.String` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if an error occurs during printing
(get this field)
Gets the value of the specified field from this date-time as an int.
This queries this date-time for the value of the specified field. The returned value will always be within the valid range of values for the field. If it is not possible to return the value, because the field is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown.
If the field is a ChronoField then the query is implemented here. The supported fields will return valid values based on this date-time, except NANO_OF_DAY, MICRO_OF_DAY, EPOCH_DAY and PROLEPTIC_MONTH which are too large to fit in an int and throw a DateTimeException. All other ChronoField instances will throw an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException.
If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalField.getFrom(TemporalAccessor) passing this as the argument. Whether the value can be obtained, and what the value represents, is determined by the field.
field - the field to get, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalField
returns: the value for the field - int
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if a value for the field cannot be obtained or the value is outside the range of valid values for the field
Gets the value of the specified field from this date-time as an int. This queries this date-time for the value of the specified field. The returned value will always be within the valid range of values for the field. If it is not possible to return the value, because the field is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown. If the field is a ChronoField then the query is implemented here. The supported fields will return valid values based on this date-time, except NANO_OF_DAY, MICRO_OF_DAY, EPOCH_DAY and PROLEPTIC_MONTH which are too large to fit in an int and throw a DateTimeException. All other ChronoField instances will throw an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException. If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalField.getFrom(TemporalAccessor) passing this as the argument. Whether the value can be obtained, and what the value represents, is determined by the field. field - the field to get, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalField` returns: the value for the field - `int` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if a value for the field cannot be obtained or the value is outside the range of valid values for the field
(get-day-of-month this)
Gets the day-of-month field.
This method returns the primitive int value for the day-of-month.
returns: the day-of-month, from 1 to 31 - int
Gets the day-of-month field. This method returns the primitive int value for the day-of-month. returns: the day-of-month, from 1 to 31 - `int`
(get-day-of-week this)
Gets the day-of-week field, which is an enum DayOfWeek.
This method returns the enum DayOfWeek for the day-of-week. This avoids confusion as to what int values mean. If you need access to the primitive int value then the enum provides the int value.
Additional information can be obtained from the DayOfWeek. This includes textual names of the values.
returns: the day-of-week, not null - java.time.DayOfWeek
Gets the day-of-week field, which is an enum DayOfWeek. This method returns the enum DayOfWeek for the day-of-week. This avoids confusion as to what int values mean. If you need access to the primitive int value then the enum provides the int value. Additional information can be obtained from the DayOfWeek. This includes textual names of the values. returns: the day-of-week, not null - `java.time.DayOfWeek`
(get-day-of-year this)
Gets the day-of-year field.
This method returns the primitive int value for the day-of-year.
returns: the day-of-year, from 1 to 365, or 366 in a leap year - int
Gets the day-of-year field. This method returns the primitive int value for the day-of-year. returns: the day-of-year, from 1 to 365, or 366 in a leap year - `int`
(get-hour this)
Gets the hour-of-day field.
returns: the hour-of-day, from 0 to 23 - int
Gets the hour-of-day field. returns: the hour-of-day, from 0 to 23 - `int`
(get-long this field)
Gets the value of the specified field from this date-time as a long.
This queries this date-time for the value of the specified field. If it is not possible to return the value, because the field is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown.
If the field is a ChronoField then the query is implemented here. The supported fields will return valid values based on this date-time. All other ChronoField instances will throw an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException.
If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalField.getFrom(TemporalAccessor) passing this as the argument. Whether the value can be obtained, and what the value represents, is determined by the field.
field - the field to get, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalField
returns: the value for the field - long
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if a value for the field cannot be obtained
Gets the value of the specified field from this date-time as a long. This queries this date-time for the value of the specified field. If it is not possible to return the value, because the field is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown. If the field is a ChronoField then the query is implemented here. The supported fields will return valid values based on this date-time. All other ChronoField instances will throw an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException. If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalField.getFrom(TemporalAccessor) passing this as the argument. Whether the value can be obtained, and what the value represents, is determined by the field. field - the field to get, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalField` returns: the value for the field - `long` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if a value for the field cannot be obtained
(get-minute this)
Gets the minute-of-hour field.
returns: the minute-of-hour, from 0 to 59 - int
Gets the minute-of-hour field. returns: the minute-of-hour, from 0 to 59 - `int`
(get-month this)
Gets the month-of-year field using the Month enum.
This method returns the enum Month for the month. This avoids confusion as to what int values mean. If you need access to the primitive int value then the enum provides the int value.
returns: the month-of-year, not null - java.time.Month
Gets the month-of-year field using the Month enum. This method returns the enum Month for the month. This avoids confusion as to what int values mean. If you need access to the primitive int value then the enum provides the int value. returns: the month-of-year, not null - `java.time.Month`
(get-month-value this)
Gets the month-of-year field from 1 to 12.
This method returns the month as an int from 1 to 12. Application code is frequently clearer if the enum Month is used by calling getMonth().
returns: the month-of-year, from 1 to 12 - int
Gets the month-of-year field from 1 to 12. This method returns the month as an int from 1 to 12. Application code is frequently clearer if the enum Month is used by calling getMonth(). returns: the month-of-year, from 1 to 12 - `int`
(get-nano this)
Gets the nano-of-second field.
returns: the nano-of-second, from 0 to 999,999,999 - int
Gets the nano-of-second field. returns: the nano-of-second, from 0 to 999,999,999 - `int`
(get-second this)
Gets the second-of-minute field.
returns: the second-of-minute, from 0 to 59 - int
Gets the second-of-minute field. returns: the second-of-minute, from 0 to 59 - `int`
(get-year this)
Gets the year field.
This method returns the primitive int value for the year.
The year returned by this method is proleptic as per get(YEAR). To obtain the year-of-era, use get(YEAR_OF_ERA).
returns: the year, from MIN_YEAR to MAX_YEAR - int
Gets the year field. This method returns the primitive int value for the year. The year returned by this method is proleptic as per get(YEAR). To obtain the year-of-era, use get(YEAR_OF_ERA). returns: the year, from MIN_YEAR to MAX_YEAR - `int`
(hash-code this)
A hash code for this date-time.
returns: a suitable hash code - int
A hash code for this date-time. returns: a suitable hash code - `int`
(minus this amount-to-subtract)
(minus this amount-to-subtract unit)
Returns a copy of this date-time with the specified amount subtracted.
This returns a LocalDateTime, based on this one, with the amount in terms of the unit subtracted. If it is not possible to subtract the amount, because the unit is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown.
This method is equivalent to plus(long, TemporalUnit) with the amount negated. See that method for a full description of how addition, and thus subtraction, works.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
amount-to-subtract - the amount of the unit to subtract from the result, may be negative - long
unit - the unit of the amount to subtract, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalUnit
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the specified amount subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the subtraction cannot be made
Returns a copy of this date-time with the specified amount subtracted. This returns a LocalDateTime, based on this one, with the amount in terms of the unit subtracted. If it is not possible to subtract the amount, because the unit is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown. This method is equivalent to plus(long, TemporalUnit) with the amount negated. See that method for a full description of how addition, and thus subtraction, works. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. amount-to-subtract - the amount of the unit to subtract from the result, may be negative - `long` unit - the unit of the amount to subtract, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalUnit` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the specified amount subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the subtraction cannot be made
(minus-days this days)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of days subtracted.
This method subtracts the specified amount from the days field decrementing the month and year fields as necessary to ensure the result remains valid. The result is only invalid if the maximum/minimum year is exceeded.
For example, 2009-01-01 minus one day would result in 2008-12-31.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
days - the days to subtract, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the days subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of days subtracted. This method subtracts the specified amount from the days field decrementing the month and year fields as necessary to ensure the result remains valid. The result is only invalid if the maximum/minimum year is exceeded. For example, 2009-01-01 minus one day would result in 2008-12-31. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. days - the days to subtract, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the days subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(minus-hours this hours)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of hours subtracted.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
hours - the hours to subtract, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the hours subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of hours subtracted. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. hours - the hours to subtract, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the hours subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(minus-minutes this minutes)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of minutes subtracted.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
minutes - the minutes to subtract, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the minutes subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of minutes subtracted. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. minutes - the minutes to subtract, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the minutes subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(minus-months this months)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of months subtracted.
This method subtracts the specified amount from the months field in three steps:
Subtract the input months from the month-of-year field Check if the resulting date would be invalid Adjust the day-of-month to the last valid day if necessary
For example, 2007-03-31 minus one month would result in the invalid date 2007-04-31. Instead of returning an invalid result, the last valid day of the month, 2007-04-30, is selected instead.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
months - the months to subtract, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the months subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of months subtracted. This method subtracts the specified amount from the months field in three steps: Subtract the input months from the month-of-year field Check if the resulting date would be invalid Adjust the day-of-month to the last valid day if necessary For example, 2007-03-31 minus one month would result in the invalid date 2007-04-31. Instead of returning an invalid result, the last valid day of the month, 2007-04-30, is selected instead. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. months - the months to subtract, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the months subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(minus-nanos this nanos)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of nanoseconds subtracted.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
nanos - the nanos to subtract, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the nanoseconds subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of nanoseconds subtracted. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. nanos - the nanos to subtract, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the nanoseconds subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(minus-seconds this seconds)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of seconds subtracted.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
seconds - the seconds to subtract, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the seconds subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of seconds subtracted. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. seconds - the seconds to subtract, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the seconds subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(minus-weeks this weeks)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of weeks subtracted.
This method subtracts the specified amount in weeks from the days field decrementing the month and year fields as necessary to ensure the result remains valid. The result is only invalid if the maximum/minimum year is exceeded.
For example, 2009-01-07 minus one week would result in 2008-12-31.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
weeks - the weeks to subtract, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the weeks subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of weeks subtracted. This method subtracts the specified amount in weeks from the days field decrementing the month and year fields as necessary to ensure the result remains valid. The result is only invalid if the maximum/minimum year is exceeded. For example, 2009-01-07 minus one week would result in 2008-12-31. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. weeks - the weeks to subtract, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the weeks subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(minus-years this years)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of years subtracted.
This method subtracts the specified amount from the years field in three steps:
Subtract the input years from the year field Check if the resulting date would be invalid Adjust the day-of-month to the last valid day if necessary
For example, 2008-02-29 (leap year) minus one year would result in the invalid date 2009-02-29 (standard year). Instead of returning an invalid result, the last valid day of the month, 2009-02-28, is selected instead.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
years - the years to subtract, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the years subtracted, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of years subtracted. This method subtracts the specified amount from the years field in three steps: Subtract the input years from the year field Check if the resulting date would be invalid Adjust the day-of-month to the last valid day if necessary For example, 2008-02-29 (leap year) minus one year would result in the invalid date 2009-02-29 (standard year). Instead of returning an invalid result, the last valid day of the month, 2009-02-28, is selected instead. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. years - the years to subtract, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the years subtracted, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(plus this amount-to-add)
(plus this amount-to-add unit)
Returns a copy of this date-time with the specified amount added.
This returns a LocalDateTime, based on this one, with the amount in terms of the unit added. If it is not possible to add the amount, because the unit is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown.
If the field is a ChronoUnit then the addition is implemented here. Date units are added as per LocalDate.plus(long, TemporalUnit). Time units are added as per LocalTime.plus(long, TemporalUnit) with any overflow in days added equivalent to using plusDays(long).
If the field is not a ChronoUnit, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalUnit.addTo(Temporal, long) passing this as the argument. In this case, the unit determines whether and how to perform the addition.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
amount-to-add - the amount of the unit to add to the result, may be negative - long
unit - the unit of the amount to add, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalUnit
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the specified amount added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the addition cannot be made
Returns a copy of this date-time with the specified amount added. This returns a LocalDateTime, based on this one, with the amount in terms of the unit added. If it is not possible to add the amount, because the unit is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown. If the field is a ChronoUnit then the addition is implemented here. Date units are added as per LocalDate.plus(long, TemporalUnit). Time units are added as per LocalTime.plus(long, TemporalUnit) with any overflow in days added equivalent to using plusDays(long). If the field is not a ChronoUnit, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalUnit.addTo(Temporal, long) passing this as the argument. In this case, the unit determines whether and how to perform the addition. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. amount-to-add - the amount of the unit to add to the result, may be negative - `long` unit - the unit of the amount to add, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalUnit` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the specified amount added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the addition cannot be made
(plus-days this days)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of days added.
This method adds the specified amount to the days field incrementing the month and year fields as necessary to ensure the result remains valid. The result is only invalid if the maximum/minimum year is exceeded.
For example, 2008-12-31 plus one day would result in 2009-01-01.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
days - the days to add, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the days added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of days added. This method adds the specified amount to the days field incrementing the month and year fields as necessary to ensure the result remains valid. The result is only invalid if the maximum/minimum year is exceeded. For example, 2008-12-31 plus one day would result in 2009-01-01. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. days - the days to add, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the days added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(plus-hours this hours)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of hours added.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
hours - the hours to add, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the hours added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of hours added. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. hours - the hours to add, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the hours added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(plus-minutes this minutes)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of minutes added.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
minutes - the minutes to add, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the minutes added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of minutes added. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. minutes - the minutes to add, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the minutes added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(plus-months this months)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of months added.
This method adds the specified amount to the months field in three steps:
Add the input months to the month-of-year field Check if the resulting date would be invalid Adjust the day-of-month to the last valid day if necessary
For example, 2007-03-31 plus one month would result in the invalid date 2007-04-31. Instead of returning an invalid result, the last valid day of the month, 2007-04-30, is selected instead.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
months - the months to add, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the months added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of months added. This method adds the specified amount to the months field in three steps: Add the input months to the month-of-year field Check if the resulting date would be invalid Adjust the day-of-month to the last valid day if necessary For example, 2007-03-31 plus one month would result in the invalid date 2007-04-31. Instead of returning an invalid result, the last valid day of the month, 2007-04-30, is selected instead. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. months - the months to add, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the months added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(plus-nanos this nanos)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of nanoseconds added.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
nanos - the nanos to add, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the nanoseconds added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of nanoseconds added. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. nanos - the nanos to add, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the nanoseconds added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(plus-seconds this seconds)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of seconds added.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
seconds - the seconds to add, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the seconds added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of seconds added. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. seconds - the seconds to add, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the seconds added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(plus-weeks this weeks)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of weeks added.
This method adds the specified amount in weeks to the days field incrementing the month and year fields as necessary to ensure the result remains valid. The result is only invalid if the maximum/minimum year is exceeded.
For example, 2008-12-31 plus one week would result in 2009-01-07.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
weeks - the weeks to add, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the weeks added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of weeks added. This method adds the specified amount in weeks to the days field incrementing the month and year fields as necessary to ensure the result remains valid. The result is only invalid if the maximum/minimum year is exceeded. For example, 2008-12-31 plus one week would result in 2009-01-07. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. weeks - the weeks to add, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the weeks added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(plus-years this years)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of years added.
This method adds the specified amount to the years field in three steps:
Add the input years to the year field Check if the resulting date would be invalid Adjust the day-of-month to the last valid day if necessary
For example, 2008-02-29 (leap year) plus one year would result in the invalid date 2009-02-29 (standard year). Instead of returning an invalid result, the last valid day of the month, 2009-02-28, is selected instead.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
years - the years to add, may be negative - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the years added, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the specified number of years added. This method adds the specified amount to the years field in three steps: Add the input years to the year field Check if the resulting date would be invalid Adjust the day-of-month to the last valid day if necessary For example, 2008-02-29 (leap year) plus one year would result in the invalid date 2009-02-29 (standard year). Instead of returning an invalid result, the last valid day of the month, 2009-02-28, is selected instead. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. years - the years to add, may be negative - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the years added, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the result exceeds the supported date range
(query this query)
Queries this date-time using the specified query.
This queries this date-time using the specified query strategy object. The TemporalQuery object defines the logic to be used to obtain the result. Read the documentation of the query to understand what the result of this method will be.
The result of this method is obtained by invoking the TemporalQuery.queryFrom(TemporalAccessor) method on the specified query passing this as the argument.
query - the query to invoke, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalQuery
returns: the query result, null may be returned (defined by the query) - <R> R
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if unable to query (defined by the query)
Queries this date-time using the specified query. This queries this date-time using the specified query strategy object. The TemporalQuery object defines the logic to be used to obtain the result. Read the documentation of the query to understand what the result of this method will be. The result of this method is obtained by invoking the TemporalQuery.queryFrom(TemporalAccessor) method on the specified query passing this as the argument. query - the query to invoke, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalQuery` returns: the query result, null may be returned (defined by the query) - `<R> R` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if unable to query (defined by the query)
(range this field)
Gets the range of valid values for the specified field.
The range object expresses the minimum and maximum valid values for a field. This date-time is used to enhance the accuracy of the returned range. If it is not possible to return the range, because the field is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown.
If the field is a ChronoField then the query is implemented here. The supported fields will return appropriate range instances. All other ChronoField instances will throw an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException.
If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalField.rangeRefinedBy(TemporalAccessor) passing this as the argument. Whether the range can be obtained is determined by the field.
field - the field to query the range for, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalField
returns: the range of valid values for the field, not null - java.time.temporal.ValueRange
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the range for the field cannot be obtained
Gets the range of valid values for the specified field. The range object expresses the minimum and maximum valid values for a field. This date-time is used to enhance the accuracy of the returned range. If it is not possible to return the range, because the field is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown. If the field is a ChronoField then the query is implemented here. The supported fields will return appropriate range instances. All other ChronoField instances will throw an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException. If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalField.rangeRefinedBy(TemporalAccessor) passing this as the argument. Whether the range can be obtained is determined by the field. field - the field to query the range for, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalField` returns: the range of valid values for the field, not null - `java.time.temporal.ValueRange` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the range for the field cannot be obtained
(supported? this field)
Checks if the specified field is supported.
This checks if this date-time can be queried for the specified field. If false, then calling the range, get and with(TemporalField, long) methods will throw an exception.
If the field is a ChronoField then the query is implemented here. The supported fields are:
NANO_OF_SECOND NANO_OF_DAY MICRO_OF_SECOND MICRO_OF_DAY MILLI_OF_SECOND MILLI_OF_DAY SECOND_OF_MINUTE SECOND_OF_DAY MINUTE_OF_HOUR MINUTE_OF_DAY HOUR_OF_AMPM CLOCK_HOUR_OF_AMPM HOUR_OF_DAY CLOCK_HOUR_OF_DAY AMPM_OF_DAY DAY_OF_WEEK ALIGNED_DAY_OF_WEEK_IN_MONTH ALIGNED_DAY_OF_WEEK_IN_YEAR DAY_OF_MONTH DAY_OF_YEAR EPOCH_DAY ALIGNED_WEEK_OF_MONTH ALIGNED_WEEK_OF_YEAR MONTH_OF_YEAR PROLEPTIC_MONTH YEAR_OF_ERA YEAR ERA
All other ChronoField instances will return false.
If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalField.isSupportedBy(TemporalAccessor) passing this as the argument. Whether the field is supported is determined by the field.
field - the field to check, null returns false - java.time.temporal.TemporalField
returns: true if the field is supported on this date-time, false if not - boolean
Checks if the specified field is supported. This checks if this date-time can be queried for the specified field. If false, then calling the range, get and with(TemporalField, long) methods will throw an exception. If the field is a ChronoField then the query is implemented here. The supported fields are: NANO_OF_SECOND NANO_OF_DAY MICRO_OF_SECOND MICRO_OF_DAY MILLI_OF_SECOND MILLI_OF_DAY SECOND_OF_MINUTE SECOND_OF_DAY MINUTE_OF_HOUR MINUTE_OF_DAY HOUR_OF_AMPM CLOCK_HOUR_OF_AMPM HOUR_OF_DAY CLOCK_HOUR_OF_DAY AMPM_OF_DAY DAY_OF_WEEK ALIGNED_DAY_OF_WEEK_IN_MONTH ALIGNED_DAY_OF_WEEK_IN_YEAR DAY_OF_MONTH DAY_OF_YEAR EPOCH_DAY ALIGNED_WEEK_OF_MONTH ALIGNED_WEEK_OF_YEAR MONTH_OF_YEAR PROLEPTIC_MONTH YEAR_OF_ERA YEAR ERA All other ChronoField instances will return false. If the field is not a ChronoField, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalField.isSupportedBy(TemporalAccessor) passing this as the argument. Whether the field is supported is determined by the field. field - the field to check, null returns false - `java.time.temporal.TemporalField` returns: true if the field is supported on this date-time, false if not - `boolean`
(to-local-date this)
Gets the LocalDate part of this date-time.
This returns a LocalDate with the same year, month and day as this date-time.
returns: the date part of this date-time, not null - java.time.LocalDate
Gets the LocalDate part of this date-time. This returns a LocalDate with the same year, month and day as this date-time. returns: the date part of this date-time, not null - `java.time.LocalDate`
(to-local-time this)
Gets the LocalTime part of this date-time.
This returns a LocalTime with the same hour, minute, second and nanosecond as this date-time.
returns: the time part of this date-time, not null - java.time.LocalTime
Gets the LocalTime part of this date-time. This returns a LocalTime with the same hour, minute, second and nanosecond as this date-time. returns: the time part of this date-time, not null - `java.time.LocalTime`
(to-string this)
Outputs this date-time as a String, such as 2007-12-03T10:15:30.
The output will be one of the following ISO-8601 formats:
uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSSSS uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSSSSSSS
The format used will be the shortest that outputs the full value of the time where the omitted parts are implied to be zero.
returns: a string representation of this date-time, not null - java.lang.String
Outputs this date-time as a String, such as 2007-12-03T10:15:30. The output will be one of the following ISO-8601 formats: uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSSSS uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSSSSSSS The format used will be the shortest that outputs the full value of the time where the omitted parts are implied to be zero. returns: a string representation of this date-time, not null - `java.lang.String`
(truncated-to this unit)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the time truncated.
Truncation returns a copy of the original date-time with fields smaller than the specified unit set to zero. For example, truncating with the minutes unit will set the second-of-minute and nano-of-second field to zero.
The unit must have a duration that divides into the length of a standard day without remainder. This includes all supplied time units on ChronoUnit and DAYS. Other units throw an exception.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
unit - the unit to truncate to, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalUnit
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the time truncated, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if unable to truncate
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the time truncated. Truncation returns a copy of the original date-time with fields smaller than the specified unit set to zero. For example, truncating with the minutes unit will set the second-of-minute and nano-of-second field to zero. The unit must have a duration that divides into the length of a standard day without remainder. This includes all supplied time units on ChronoUnit and DAYS. Other units throw an exception. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. unit - the unit to truncate to, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalUnit` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the time truncated, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if unable to truncate
(until this end-exclusive unit)
Calculates the amount of time until another date-time in terms of the specified unit.
This calculates the amount of time between two LocalDateTime objects in terms of a single TemporalUnit. The start and end points are this and the specified date-time. The result will be negative if the end is before the start. The Temporal passed to this method is converted to a LocalDateTime using from(TemporalAccessor). For example, the amount in days between two date-times can be calculated using startDateTime.until(endDateTime, DAYS).
The calculation returns a whole number, representing the number of complete units between the two date-times. For example, the amount in months between 2012-06-15T00:00 and 2012-08-14T23:59 will only be one month as it is one minute short of two months.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method. The first is to invoke this method. The second is to use TemporalUnit.between(Temporal, Temporal):
// these two lines are equivalent amount = start.until(end, MONTHS); amount = MONTHS.between(start, end); The choice should be made based on which makes the code more readable.
The calculation is implemented in this method for ChronoUnit. The units NANOS, MICROS, MILLIS, SECONDS, MINUTES, HOURS and HALF_DAYS, DAYS, WEEKS, MONTHS, YEARS, DECADES, CENTURIES, MILLENNIA and ERAS are supported. Other ChronoUnit values will throw an exception.
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 converted input temporal as the second argument.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
end-exclusive - the end date, exclusive, which is converted to a LocalDateTime, not null - java.time.temporal.Temporal
unit - the unit to measure the amount in, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalUnit
returns: the amount of time between this date-time and the end date-time - long
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the amount cannot be calculated, or the end temporal cannot be converted to a LocalDateTime
Calculates the amount of time until another date-time in terms of the specified unit. This calculates the amount of time between two LocalDateTime objects in terms of a single TemporalUnit. The start and end points are this and the specified date-time. The result will be negative if the end is before the start. The Temporal passed to this method is converted to a LocalDateTime using from(TemporalAccessor). For example, the amount in days between two date-times can be calculated using startDateTime.until(endDateTime, DAYS). The calculation returns a whole number, representing the number of complete units between the two date-times. For example, the amount in months between 2012-06-15T00:00 and 2012-08-14T23:59 will only be one month as it is one minute short of two months. There are two equivalent ways of using this method. The first is to invoke this method. The second is to use TemporalUnit.between(Temporal, Temporal): // these two lines are equivalent amount = start.until(end, MONTHS); amount = MONTHS.between(start, end); The choice should be made based on which makes the code more readable. The calculation is implemented in this method for ChronoUnit. The units NANOS, MICROS, MILLIS, SECONDS, MINUTES, HOURS and HALF_DAYS, DAYS, WEEKS, MONTHS, YEARS, DECADES, CENTURIES, MILLENNIA and ERAS are supported. Other ChronoUnit values will throw an exception. 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 converted input temporal as the second argument. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. end-exclusive - the end date, exclusive, which is converted to a LocalDateTime, not null - `java.time.temporal.Temporal` unit - the unit to measure the amount in, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalUnit` returns: the amount of time between this date-time and the end date-time - `long` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the amount cannot be calculated, or the end temporal cannot be converted to a LocalDateTime
(with this adjuster)
(with this field new-value)
Returns a copy of this date-time with the specified field set to a new value.
This returns a LocalDateTime, based on this one, with the value for the specified field changed. This can be used to change any supported field, such as the year, month or day-of-month. If it is not possible to set the value, because the field is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown.
In some cases, changing the specified field can cause the resulting date-time to become invalid, such as changing the month from 31st January to February would make the day-of-month invalid. In cases like this, the field is responsible for resolving the date. Typically it will choose the previous valid date, which would be the last valid day of February in this example.
If the field is a ChronoField then the adjustment is implemented here. The supported fields will behave as per the matching method on LocalDate or LocalTime. All other ChronoField instances will throw an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException.
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 argument. In this case, the field determines whether and how to adjust the instant.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
field - the field to set in the result, not null - java.time.temporal.TemporalField
new-value - the new value of the field in the result - long
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this with the specified field set, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the field cannot be set
Returns a copy of this date-time with the specified field set to a new value. This returns a LocalDateTime, based on this one, with the value for the specified field changed. This can be used to change any supported field, such as the year, month or day-of-month. If it is not possible to set the value, because the field is not supported or for some other reason, an exception is thrown. In some cases, changing the specified field can cause the resulting date-time to become invalid, such as changing the month from 31st January to February would make the day-of-month invalid. In cases like this, the field is responsible for resolving the date. Typically it will choose the previous valid date, which would be the last valid day of February in this example. If the field is a ChronoField then the adjustment is implemented here. The supported fields will behave as per the matching method on LocalDate or LocalTime. All other ChronoField instances will throw an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException. 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 argument. In this case, the field determines whether and how to adjust the instant. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. field - the field to set in the result, not null - `java.time.temporal.TemporalField` new-value - the new value of the field in the result - `long` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this with the specified field set, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the field cannot be set
(with-day-of-month this day-of-month)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the day-of-month altered.
If the resulting date-time is invalid, an exception is thrown. The time does not affect the calculation and will be the same in the result.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
day-of-month - the day-of-month to set in the result, from 1 to 28-31 - int
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested day, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the day-of-month value is invalid, or if the day-of-month is invalid for the month-year
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the day-of-month altered. If the resulting date-time is invalid, an exception is thrown. The time does not affect the calculation and will be the same in the result. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. day-of-month - the day-of-month to set in the result, from 1 to 28-31 - `int` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested day, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the day-of-month value is invalid, or if the day-of-month is invalid for the month-year
(with-day-of-year this day-of-year)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the day-of-year altered.
If the resulting date-time is invalid, an exception is thrown.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
day-of-year - the day-of-year to set in the result, from 1 to 365-366 - int
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date with the requested day, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the day-of-year value is invalid, or if the day-of-year is invalid for the year
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the day-of-year altered. If the resulting date-time is invalid, an exception is thrown. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. day-of-year - the day-of-year to set in the result, from 1 to 365-366 - `int` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date with the requested day, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the day-of-year value is invalid, or if the day-of-year is invalid for the year
(with-hour this hour)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the hour-of-day altered.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
hour - the hour-of-day to set in the result, from 0 to 23 - int
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested hour, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the hour value is invalid
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the hour-of-day altered. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. hour - the hour-of-day to set in the result, from 0 to 23 - `int` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested hour, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the hour value is invalid
(with-minute this minute)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the minute-of-hour altered.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
minute - the minute-of-hour to set in the result, from 0 to 59 - int
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested minute, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the minute value is invalid
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the minute-of-hour altered. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. minute - the minute-of-hour to set in the result, from 0 to 59 - `int` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested minute, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the minute value is invalid
(with-month this month)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the month-of-year altered.
The time does not affect the calculation and will be the same in the result. If the day-of-month is invalid for the year, it will be changed to the last valid day of the month.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
month - the month-of-year to set in the result, from 1 (January) to 12 (December) - int
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested month, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the month-of-year value is invalid
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the month-of-year altered. The time does not affect the calculation and will be the same in the result. If the day-of-month is invalid for the year, it will be changed to the last valid day of the month. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. month - the month-of-year to set in the result, from 1 (January) to 12 (December) - `int` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested month, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the month-of-year value is invalid
(with-nano this nano-of-second)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the nano-of-second altered.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
nano-of-second - the nano-of-second to set in the result, from 0 to 999,999,999 - int
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested nanosecond, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the nano value is invalid
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the nano-of-second altered. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. nano-of-second - the nano-of-second to set in the result, from 0 to 999,999,999 - `int` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested nanosecond, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the nano value is invalid
(with-second this second)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the second-of-minute altered.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
second - the second-of-minute to set in the result, from 0 to 59 - int
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested second, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the second value is invalid
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the second-of-minute altered. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. second - the second-of-minute to set in the result, from 0 to 59 - `int` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested second, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the second value is invalid
(with-year this year)
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the year altered.
The time does not affect the calculation and will be the same in the result. If the day-of-month is invalid for the year, it will be changed to the last valid day of the month.
This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.
year - the year to set in the result, from MIN_YEAR to MAX_YEAR - int
returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested year, not null - java.time.LocalDateTime
throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the year value is invalid
Returns a copy of this LocalDateTime with the year altered. The time does not affect the calculation and will be the same in the result. If the day-of-month is invalid for the year, it will be changed to the last valid day of the month. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call. year - the year to set in the result, from MIN_YEAR to MAX_YEAR - `int` returns: a LocalDateTime based on this date-time with the requested year, not null - `java.time.LocalDateTime` throws: java.time.DateTimeException - if the year value is invalid
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