Java Code Examples for sun.util.calendar.BaseCalendar#SUNDAY
The following examples show how to use
sun.util.calendar.BaseCalendar#SUNDAY .
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Example 1
Source File: Date.java From jdk8u_jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this <code>Date</code> object to a <code>String</code> * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li><tt>dow</tt> is the day of the week (<tt>Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat</tt>). * <li><tt>mon</tt> is the month (<tt>Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec</tt>). * <li><tt>dd</tt> is the day of the month (<tt>01</tt> through * <tt>31</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>hh</tt> is the hour of the day (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>23</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>mm</tt> is the minute within the hour (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>59</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>ss</tt> is the second within the minute (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>61</tt>, as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>zzz</tt> is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method <tt>parse</tt>. If time zone * information is not available, then <tt>zzz</tt> is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li><tt>yyyy</tt> is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 2
Source File: Date.java From jdk8u-jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this <code>Date</code> object to a <code>String</code> * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li><tt>dow</tt> is the day of the week (<tt>Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat</tt>). * <li><tt>mon</tt> is the month (<tt>Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec</tt>). * <li><tt>dd</tt> is the day of the month (<tt>01</tt> through * <tt>31</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>hh</tt> is the hour of the day (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>23</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>mm</tt> is the minute within the hour (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>59</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>ss</tt> is the second within the minute (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>61</tt>, as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>zzz</tt> is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method <tt>parse</tt>. If time zone * information is not available, then <tt>zzz</tt> is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li><tt>yyyy</tt> is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 3
Source File: Date.java From openjdk-jdk9 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this {@code Date} object to a {@code String} * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li>{@code dow} is the day of the week ({@code Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat}). * <li>{@code mon} is the month ({@code Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec}). * <li>{@code dd} is the day of the month ({@code 01} through * {@code 31}), as two decimal digits. * <li>{@code hh} is the hour of the day ({@code 00} through * {@code 23}), as two decimal digits. * <li>{@code mm} is the minute within the hour ({@code 00} through * {@code 59}), as two decimal digits. * <li>{@code ss} is the second within the minute ({@code 00} through * {@code 61}, as two decimal digits. * <li>{@code zzz} is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method {@code parse}. If time zone * information is not available, then {@code zzz} is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li>{@code yyyy} is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 4
Source File: Date.java From Bytecoder with Apache License 2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this {@code Date} object to a {@code String} * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li>{@code dow} is the day of the week ({@code Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat}). * <li>{@code mon} is the month ({@code Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec}). * <li>{@code dd} is the day of the month ({@code 01} through * {@code 31}), as two decimal digits. * <li>{@code hh} is the hour of the day ({@code 00} through * {@code 23}), as two decimal digits. * <li>{@code mm} is the minute within the hour ({@code 00} through * {@code 59}), as two decimal digits. * <li>{@code ss} is the second within the minute ({@code 00} through * {@code 61}, as two decimal digits. * <li>{@code zzz} is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method {@code parse}. If time zone * information is not available, then {@code zzz} is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li>{@code yyyy} is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 5
Source File: Date.java From hottub with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this <code>Date</code> object to a <code>String</code> * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li><tt>dow</tt> is the day of the week (<tt>Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat</tt>). * <li><tt>mon</tt> is the month (<tt>Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec</tt>). * <li><tt>dd</tt> is the day of the month (<tt>01</tt> through * <tt>31</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>hh</tt> is the hour of the day (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>23</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>mm</tt> is the minute within the hour (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>59</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>ss</tt> is the second within the minute (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>61</tt>, as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>zzz</tt> is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method <tt>parse</tt>. If time zone * information is not available, then <tt>zzz</tt> is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li><tt>yyyy</tt> is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 6
Source File: Date.java From openjdk-jdk8u-backup with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this <code>Date</code> object to a <code>String</code> * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li><tt>dow</tt> is the day of the week (<tt>Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat</tt>). * <li><tt>mon</tt> is the month (<tt>Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec</tt>). * <li><tt>dd</tt> is the day of the month (<tt>01</tt> through * <tt>31</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>hh</tt> is the hour of the day (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>23</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>mm</tt> is the minute within the hour (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>59</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>ss</tt> is the second within the minute (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>61</tt>, as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>zzz</tt> is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method <tt>parse</tt>. If time zone * information is not available, then <tt>zzz</tt> is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li><tt>yyyy</tt> is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 7
Source File: Date.java From jdk8u60 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this <code>Date</code> object to a <code>String</code> * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li><tt>dow</tt> is the day of the week (<tt>Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat</tt>). * <li><tt>mon</tt> is the month (<tt>Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec</tt>). * <li><tt>dd</tt> is the day of the month (<tt>01</tt> through * <tt>31</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>hh</tt> is the hour of the day (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>23</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>mm</tt> is the minute within the hour (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>59</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>ss</tt> is the second within the minute (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>61</tt>, as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>zzz</tt> is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method <tt>parse</tt>. If time zone * information is not available, then <tt>zzz</tt> is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li><tt>yyyy</tt> is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 8
Source File: Date.java From TencentKona-8 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this <code>Date</code> object to a <code>String</code> * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li><tt>dow</tt> is the day of the week (<tt>Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat</tt>). * <li><tt>mon</tt> is the month (<tt>Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec</tt>). * <li><tt>dd</tt> is the day of the month (<tt>01</tt> through * <tt>31</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>hh</tt> is the hour of the day (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>23</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>mm</tt> is the minute within the hour (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>59</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>ss</tt> is the second within the minute (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>61</tt>, as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>zzz</tt> is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method <tt>parse</tt>. If time zone * information is not available, then <tt>zzz</tt> is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li><tt>yyyy</tt> is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 9
Source File: Date.java From jdk8u-jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this <code>Date</code> object to a <code>String</code> * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li><tt>dow</tt> is the day of the week (<tt>Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat</tt>). * <li><tt>mon</tt> is the month (<tt>Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec</tt>). * <li><tt>dd</tt> is the day of the month (<tt>01</tt> through * <tt>31</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>hh</tt> is the hour of the day (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>23</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>mm</tt> is the minute within the hour (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>59</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>ss</tt> is the second within the minute (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>61</tt>, as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>zzz</tt> is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method <tt>parse</tt>. If time zone * information is not available, then <tt>zzz</tt> is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li><tt>yyyy</tt> is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 10
Source File: Date.java From jdk1.8-source-analysis with Apache License 2.0 | 4 votes |
/** * Converts this <code>Date</code> object to a <code>String</code> * of the form: * <blockquote><pre> * dow mon dd hh:mm:ss zzz yyyy</pre></blockquote> * where:<ul> * <li><tt>dow</tt> is the day of the week (<tt>Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, * Thu, Fri, Sat</tt>). * <li><tt>mon</tt> is the month (<tt>Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, * Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec</tt>). * <li><tt>dd</tt> is the day of the month (<tt>01</tt> through * <tt>31</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>hh</tt> is the hour of the day (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>23</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>mm</tt> is the minute within the hour (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>59</tt>), as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>ss</tt> is the second within the minute (<tt>00</tt> through * <tt>61</tt>, as two decimal digits. * <li><tt>zzz</tt> is the time zone (and may reflect daylight saving * time). Standard time zone abbreviations include those * recognized by the method <tt>parse</tt>. If time zone * information is not available, then <tt>zzz</tt> is empty - * that is, it consists of no characters at all. * <li><tt>yyyy</tt> is the year, as four decimal digits. * </ul> * * @return a string representation of this date. * @see java.util.Date#toLocaleString() * @see java.util.Date#toGMTString() */ public String toString() { // "EEE MMM dd HH:mm:ss zzz yyyy"; BaseCalendar.Date date = normalize(); StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(28); int index = date.getDayOfWeek(); if (index == BaseCalendar.SUNDAY) { index = 8; } convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[index]).append(' '); // EEE convertToAbbr(sb, wtb[date.getMonth() - 1 + 2 + 7]).append(' '); // MMM CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getDayOfMonth(), 2).append(' '); // dd CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getHours(), 2).append(':'); // HH CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getMinutes(), 2).append(':'); // mm CalendarUtils.sprintf0d(sb, date.getSeconds(), 2).append(' '); // ss TimeZone zi = date.getZone(); if (zi != null) { sb.append(zi.getDisplayName(date.isDaylightTime(), TimeZone.SHORT, Locale.US)); // zzz } else { sb.append("GMT"); } sb.append(' ').append(date.getYear()); // yyyy return sb.toString(); }
Example 11
Source File: Date.java From jdk8u60 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 12
Source File: Date.java From jdk8u_jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 13
Source File: Date.java From jdk8u-dev-jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 14
Source File: Date.java From j2objc with Apache License 2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 15
Source File: Date.java From openjdk-8 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 16
Source File: Date.java From openjdk-jdk8u-backup with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 17
Source File: Date.java From openjdk-8-source with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 18
Source File: Date.java From openjdk-jdk9 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value ({@code 0} = Sunday, {@code 1} = Monday, * {@code 2} = Tuesday, {@code 3} = Wednesday, {@code 4} = * Thursday, {@code 5} = Friday, {@code 6} = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this {@code Date} object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by {@code Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)}. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 19
Source File: Date.java From dragonwell8_jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }
Example 20
Source File: Date.java From jdk8u-jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Returns the day of the week represented by this date. The * returned value (<tt>0</tt> = Sunday, <tt>1</tt> = Monday, * <tt>2</tt> = Tuesday, <tt>3</tt> = Wednesday, <tt>4</tt> = * Thursday, <tt>5</tt> = Friday, <tt>6</tt> = Saturday) * represents the day of the week that contains or begins with * the instant in time represented by this <tt>Date</tt> object, * as interpreted in the local time zone. * * @return the day of the week represented by this date. * @see java.util.Calendar * @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1, * replaced by <code>Calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK)</code>. */ @Deprecated public int getDay() { return normalize().getDayOfWeek() - BaseCalendar.SUNDAY; }