I want to parse a timestamp in the form of yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss
as LocalDateTime
. When doing so, it strips the seconds if they are 00
.
As described here, I need to use a custom formatter
LocalDateTime date = LocalDateTime.parse("2008-10-02T12:30:00");
DateTimeFormatter f = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss");
String dateString = date.toString();
String dateFormatted = date.format(f);
System.out.println(dateString); // 2008-10-02T12:30
This one works, but it returns a String
:
System.out.println(dateFormatted); // 2008-10-02T12:30:00
When I parse the string to LocalDateTime
it strips the 00
again:
LocalDateTime dateLDT = LocalDateTime.parse(dateFormatted, f);
System.out.println(dateLDT); // 2008-10-02T12:30
So how can I parse a date as LocalDateTime
, instead of String
, and keep the 00
at the end?
You should expect a difference in output between
LocalDateTime dateLDT = LocalDateTime.parse(dateFormatted, f);
System.out.println(dateLDT);
And
System.out.println(dateLDT.format(f)) //or f.format(dateLDT)
System.out.println(dateLDT);
prints the value of dateLDT.toString()
, which is not expected to produce the same output as your pattern.
When you look at LocalDateTime.toString()
, you'll see that it delegates the time part to LocalTime.toString()
, which prints seconds conditionally:
public String toString() {
...
if (secondValue > 0 || nanoValue > 0) {
buf.append(secondValue < 10 ? ":0" : ":").append(secondValue);
...
}
}
return buf.toString();
}
It simply omits the seconds field if its value is 0
.
What you need to do in this case is always use a DateTimeFormatter
to format your date if you have to be certain about the output/input format.