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Home/ Questions/Q 657055
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T22:46:53+00:00 2026-05-13T22:46:53+00:00

I am receiving a Find Bugs error – call to method of static java.text.DateFormat

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I am receiving a Find Bugs error – call to method of static java.text.DateFormat and
I don’t know the reason why it’s not good / advisable to be doing these things below.

private static final Date TODAY = Calendar.getInstance().getTime();
private static final DateFormat yymmdd = new SimpleDateFormat("yyMMdd"); 

private String fileName = "file_" + yymmdd.format(TODAY);
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T22:46:53+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 10:46 pm

    DateFormats are not thread-safe, meaning that they maintain an internal representation of state. Using them in a static context can yield some pretty strange bugs if multiple threads access the same instance simultaneously.

    My suggestion would be to make your variables local to where you’re using them instead of making them static properties of the class. It looks like you might be doing this when you’re initializing the class, so you could do this in the constructor:

    public class MyClass {
        private String fileName;
    
        public MyClass() {
            final Date today = Calendar.getInstance().getTime();
            final DateFormat yymmdd = new SimpleDateFormat("yyMMdd"); 
    
            this.fileName = "file_" + yymmdd.format(TODAY);
        }
        ...
    }
    

    And if you need to use the formatter in multiple places, you might just make the pattern static final and create a new local DateFormat when needed:

    public class MyClass {
        private static final String FILENAME_DATE_PATTERN = "yyMMdd";
    
        public void myMethod() {
            final DateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat(FILENAME_DATE_PATTERN);
            // do some formatting
        }
    }
    

    The FindBugs documentation for the issue says:

    As the JavaDoc states, DateFormats are
    inherently unsafe for multithreaded
    use. The detector has found a call to
    an instance of DateFormat that has
    been obtained via a static field. This
    looks suspicous.

    For more information on this see Sun
    Bug #6231579 and Sun Bug #6178997.

    And the javadoc for DateFormat suggests:

    Date formats are not synchronized. It
    is recommended to create separate
    format instances for each thread. If
    multiple threads access a format
    concurrently, it must be synchronized
    externally.

    Jack Leow’s answer also has a good point about the semantics of your static use of “TODAY”.

    As an aside, I’ve actually seen this happen in a high-traffic production environment, and it’s a very confusing thing to debug at first; so in my experience the FindBugs warning is actually a useful suggestion (unlike some other static analysis rules, which sometimes seem to be nitpicky).

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