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Home/ Questions/Q 65185
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T18:54:25+00:00 2026-05-10T18:54:25+00:00

I have a string from an email header, like Date: Mon, 27 Oct 2008

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I have a string from an email header, like Date: Mon, 27 Oct 2008 08:33:29 -0700. What I need is an instance of GregorianCalendar, that will represent the same moment. As easy as that — how do I do it?

And for the fastest ones — this is not going to work properly:

SimpleDateFormat format = ... // whatever you want Date date = format.parse(myString) GregorianCalendar calendar = new GregorianCalendar(); calendar.setTime(date) 

because it will normalize the timezone to UTC (or your local machine time, depending on Java version). What I need is calendar.getTimeZone().getRawOffset() to return -7 * milisInAnHour.

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  1. 2026-05-10T18:54:25+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 6:54 pm

    I’d recommend looking into the Joda Time library, if that’s an option. I’m normally against using a third-party library when the core platform provides similar functionality, but I made this an exception because the author of Joda Time is also behind JSR310, and Joda Time is basically going to be rolled into Java 7 eventually.

    http://joda-time.sourceforge.net/

    So anyway, if Joda Time is an option, something like this should work:

    DateTimeFormatter formatter =     DateTimeFormat.forPattern('your pattern').withOffsetParsed(); DateTime dateTime = formatter.parseDateTime('your input'); GregorianCalendar cal = dateTime.toGregorianCalendar(); 

    I hope this helps.

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