java.lang.Object | |
↳ | java.util.Date |
The class Date represents a specific instant in time, with millisecond precision.
This Class has been subset for the MID Profile based on JDK 1.3. In the full API, the class Date had two additional functions. It allowed the interpretation of dates as year, month, day, hour, minute, and second values. It also allowed the formatting and parsing of date strings. Unfortunately, the API for these functions was not amenable to internationalization. As of JDK 1.1, the Calendar class should be used to convert between dates and time fields and the DateFormat class should be used to format and parse date strings. The corresponding methods in Date are deprecated.
Although the Date class is intended to reflect coordinated universal time (UTC), it may not do so exactly, depending on the host environment of the Java Virtual Machine. Nearly all modern operating systems assume that 1 day = 24x60x60 = 86400 seconds in all cases. In UTC, however, about once every year or two there is an extra second, called a "leap second." The leap second is always added as the last second of the day, and always on December 31 or June 30. For example, the last minute of the year 1995 was 61 seconds long, thanks to an added leap second. Most computer clocks are not accurate enough to be able to reflect the leap-second distinction.
Public Constructors | |||||||||||
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Date()
Allocates a
Date object and initializes it to represent the
current time specified number of milliseconds since the standard base time
known as "the epoch", namely January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT. | |||||||||||
Date(long date)
Allocates a
Date object and initializes it to represent the
specified number of milliseconds since the standard base time known as "the
epoch", namely January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT. |
Public Methods | |||||||||||
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boolean |
equals(Object obj)
Compares two dates for equality.
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long |
getTime()
Returns the number of milliseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT
represented by this Date object.
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int |
hashCode()
Returns a hash code value for this object.
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void |
setTime(long time)
Sets this Date object to represent a point in time that is
time milliseconds after January 1, 1970 00:00:00 GMT.
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Inherited Methods | |||||||||||
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Allocates a Date
object and initializes it to represent the
current time specified number of milliseconds since the standard base time
known as "the epoch", namely January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT.
Allocates a Date
object and initializes it to represent the
specified number of milliseconds since the standard base time known as "the
epoch", namely January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT.
date | the milliseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT. |
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Compares two dates for equality. The result is true
if and only
if the argument is not null
and is a Date
object
that represents the same point in time, to the millisecond, as this object.
Thus, two Date
objects are equal if and only if the
getTime
method returns the same long
value for
both.
obj | the object to compare with. |
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true
if the objects are the same; false
otherwise.Returns the number of milliseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 GMT represented by this Date object.
Returns a hash code value for this object. The result is the exclusive OR of
the two halves of the primitive long value returned by the
getTime()
method. That is, the hash code is the value of the
expression:
(int) (this.getTime() ˆ (this.getTime() >>> 32))
Sets this Date object to represent a point in time that is time milliseconds after January 1, 1970 00:00:00 GMT.
time | the number of milliseconds. |
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