While trying to transform the date format I get an exception:unparseable date and don’t know how to fix this problem.
I am receiving a string which represents an event date and would like to display this date in different format in GUI.
What I was trying to do is the following:
private String modifyDateLayout(String inputDate){
try {
//inputDate = "2010-01-04 01:32:27 UTC";
Date date = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss z").parse(inputDate);
return new SimpleDateFormat("dd.MM.yyyy HH:mm:ss").format(date);
} catch (ParseException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
return "15.01.2010";
}
}
Anyway the line
String modifiedDateString = originalDate.toString();
is dummy. I would like to get a date string in the following format:
dd.MM.yyyy HH:mm:ss
and the input String example is the following:
2010-01-04 01:32:27 UTC
Does anyone know how to convert the example date (String) above into a String format dd.MM.yyyy HH:mm:ss?
Thank you!
Edit: I fixed the wrong input date format but still it doesn’t work. Above is the pasted method and below is the screen image from debugging session.
alt text http://img683.imageshack.us/img683/193/dateproblem.png
#Update
I ran
String[] timezones = TimeZone.getAvailableIDs();
and there is UTC String in the array. It’s a strange problem.
I did a dirty hack that works:
private String modifyDateLayout(String inputDate){
try {
inputDate = inputDate.replace(" UTC", "");
Date date = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss").parse(inputDate);
return new SimpleDateFormat("dd.MM.yyyy HH:mm:ss").format(date);
} catch (ParseException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
return "15.01.2010";
}
}
But still I would prefer to transform the original input without cutting timezone away.
This code is written for Android phone using JDK 1.6.
What you’re basically doing here is relying on
Date#toString()which already has a fixed pattern. To convert a JavaDateobject into another human readable String pattern, you needSimpleDateFormat#format().By the way, the “unparseable date” exception can here only be thrown by
SimpleDateFormat#parse(). This means that theinputDateisn’t in the expected pattern"yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss z". You’ll probably need to modify the pattern to match theinputDate‘s actual pattern.Update: Okay, I did a test:
This correctly prints:
(I’m on GMT-4)
Update 2: as per your edit, you really got a
ParseExceptionon that. The most suspicious part would then be the timezone ofUTC. Is this actually known at your Java environment? What Java version and what OS version are you using? CheckTimeZone.getAvailableIDs(). There must be aUTCin between.