I'm working with a date in this format: yyyy-mm-dd
.
How can I increment this date by one day?
Something like this should do the trick:
String dt = "2008-01-01"; // Start date
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
Calendar c = Calendar.getInstance();
c.setTime(sdf.parse(dt));
c.add(Calendar.DATE, 1); // number of days to add
dt = sdf.format(c.getTime()); // dt is now the new date
UPDATE (May 2021): This is a really outdated answer for old, old Java. For Java 8 and above, see https://stackoverflow.com/a/20906602/314283
Java does appear to be well behind the eight-ball compared to C#. This utility method shows the way to do in Java SE 6 using the Calendar.add method (presumably the only easy way).
public class DateUtil
{
public static Date addDays(Date date, int days)
{
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTime(date);
cal.add(Calendar.DATE, days); //minus number would decrement the days
return cal.getTime();
}
}
To add one day, per the question asked, call it as follows:
String sourceDate = "2012-02-29";
SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
Date myDate = format.parse(sourceDate);
myDate = DateUtil.addDays(myDate, 1);
java.util.Date
, java.util.Calendar
, and java.text.SimpleDateFormat
are now legacy, supplanted by the java.time classes built into Java 8 and later. See Tutorial by Oracle.
java.time
On Java 8 and later, the java.time package makes this pretty much automatic. (Tutorial)
Assuming String
input and output:
import java.time.LocalDate;
public class DateIncrementer {
static public String addOneDay(String date) {
return LocalDate.parse(date).plusDays(1).toString();
}
}
ZonedDateDateTime
and OffsetDateTime
also have plusDays
and minusDays
methods as well as LocalDate
LocalDate
.
I prefer to use DateUtils from Apache. Check this http://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-lang/javadocs/api-2.6/org/apache/commons/lang/time/DateUtils.html. It is handy especially when you have to use it multiple places in your project and would not want to write your one liner method for this.
The API says:
addDays(Date date, int amount) : Adds a number of days to a date returning a new object.
Note that it returns a new Date object and does not make changes to the previous one itself.
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat( "yyyy-MM-dd" );
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTime( dateFormat.parse( inputString ) );
cal.add( Calendar.DATE, 1 );
Construct a Calendar object and call add(Calendar.DATE, 1);
Java 8 added a new API for working with dates and times.
With Java 8 you can use the following lines of code:
// parse date from yyyy-mm-dd pattern
LocalDate januaryFirst = LocalDate.parse("2014-01-01");
// add one day
LocalDate januarySecond = januaryFirst.plusDays(1);
januaryFirst.plusDays(1)
not date.plusDays(1)
.
Take a look at Joda-Time (https://www.joda.org/joda-time/).
DateTimeFormatter parser = ISODateTimeFormat.date();
DateTime date = parser.parseDateTime(dateString);
String nextDay = parser.print(date.plusDays(1));
Please note that this line adds 24 hours:
d1.getTime() + 1 * 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000
but this line adds one day
cal.add( Calendar.DATE, 1 );
On days with a daylight savings time change (25 or 23 hours) you will get different results!
you can use Simple java.util lib
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTime(yourDate);
cal.add(Calendar.DATE, 1);
yourDate = cal.getTime();
java.util.Date
, java.util.Calendar
, and java.text.SimpleDateFormat
are now legacy, supplanted by the java.time classes built into Java 8 and later. See Tutorial by Oracle.
Date today = new Date();
SimpleDateFormat formattedDate = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyyMMdd");
Calendar c = Calendar.getInstance();
c.add(Calendar.DATE, 1); // number of days to add
String tomorrow = (String)(formattedDate.format(c.getTime()));
System.out.println("Tomorrows date is " + tomorrow);
This will give tomorrow's date. c.add(...)
parameters could be changed from 1 to another number for appropriate increment.
Date
or Calendar
again.
If you are using Java 8, then do it like this.
LocalDate sourceDate = LocalDate.of(2017, Month.MAY, 27); // Source Date
LocalDate destDate = sourceDate.plusDays(1); // Adding a day to source date.
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd"); // Setting date format
String destDate = destDate.format(formatter)); // End date
If you want to use SimpleDateFormat, then do it like this.
String sourceDate = "2017-05-27"; // Start date
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance();
calendar.setTime(sdf.parse(sourceDate)); // parsed date and setting to calendar
calendar.add(Calendar.DATE, 1); // number of days to add
String destDate = sdf.format(calendar.getTime()); // End date
LocalDate
class not LocalDateTime
.
Since Java 1.5 TimeUnit.DAYS.toMillis(1) looks more clean to me.
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat( "yyyy-MM-dd" );
Date day = dateFormat.parse(string);
// add the day
Date dayAfter = new Date(day.getTime() + TimeUnit.DAYS.toMillis(1));
LocalDate
class in the java.time classes for Java 8 and later, and the back-port to Java 6 & Java 7 found in the ThreeTen-Backport project.
long timeadj = 24*60*60*1000;
Date newDate = new Date (oldDate.getTime ()+timeadj);
This takes the number of milliseconds since epoch from oldDate and adds 1 day worth of milliseconds then uses the Date() public constructor to create a date using the new value. This method allows you to add 1 day, or any number of hours/minutes, not only whole days.
In Java 8 simple way to do is:
Date.from(Instant.now().plusSeconds(SECONDS_PER_DAY))
Instant.now().plus( 1 , ChronoUnit.DAYS )
?
It's very simple, trying to explain in a simple word. get the today's date as below
Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance();
System.out.println(calendar.getTime());// print today's date
calendar.add(Calendar.DATE, 1);
Now set one day ahead with this date by calendar.add method which takes (constant, value). Here constant could be DATE, hours, min, sec etc. and value is the value of constant. Like for one day, ahead constant is Calendar.DATE and its value are 1 because we want one day ahead value.
System.out.println(calendar.getTime());// print modified date which is
tomorrow's date
Thanks
Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH
for code readability
startCalendar.add(Calendar.DATE, 1); //Add 1 Day to the current Calender
Calendar
class in 2019.
Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH
for code readability
In java 8 you can use java.time.LocalDate
LocalDate parsedDate = LocalDate.parse("2015-10-30"); //Parse date from String
LocalDate addedDate = parsedDate.plusDays(1); //Add one to the day field
You can convert in into java.util.Date
object as follows.
Date date = Date.from(addedDate.atStartOfDay(ZoneId.systemDefault()).toInstant());
You can formate LocalDate
into a String as follows.
String str = addedDate.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd"));
With Java SE 8 or higher you should use the new Date/Time API
int days = 7;
LocalDate dateRedeemed = LocalDate.now();
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("dd/MM/YYYY");
String newDate = dateRedeemed.plusDays(days).format(formatter);
System.out.println(newDate);
If you need to convert from java.util.Date
to java.time.LocalDate
, you may use this method.
public LocalDate asLocalDate(Date date) {
Instant instant = date.toInstant();
ZonedDateTime zdt = instant.atZone(ZoneId.systemDefault());
return zdt.toLocalDate();
}
With a version prior to Java SE 8 you may use Joda-Time
Joda-Time provides a quality replacement for the Java date and time classes and is the de facto standard date and time library for Java prior to Java SE 8
int days = 7;
DateTime dateRedeemed = DateTime.now();
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormat.forPattern("dd/MM/uuuu");
String newDate = dateRedeemed.plusDays(days).toString(formatter);
System.out.println(newDate);
Apache Commons already has this DateUtils.addDays(Date date, int amount) http://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-lang/apidocs/org/apache/commons/lang3/time/DateUtils.html#addDays%28java.util.Date,%20int%29 which you use or you could go with the JodaTime to make it more cleaner.
Just pass date in String and number of next days
private String getNextDate(String givenDate,int noOfDays) {
SimpleDateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
String nextDaysDate = null;
try {
cal.setTime(dateFormat.parse(givenDate));
cal.add(Calendar.DATE, noOfDays);
nextDaysDate = dateFormat.format(cal.getTime());
} catch (ParseException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(GR_TravelRepublic.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}finally{
dateFormat = null;
cal = null;
}
return nextDaysDate;
}
If you want to add a single unit of time and you expect that other fields to be incremented as well, you can safely use add method. See example below:
SimpleDateFormat simpleDateFormat1 = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.set(1970,Calendar.DECEMBER,31);
System.out.println(simpleDateFormat1.format(cal.getTime()));
cal.add(Calendar.DATE, 1);
System.out.println(simpleDateFormat1.format(cal.getTime()));
cal.add(Calendar.DATE, -1);
System.out.println(simpleDateFormat1.format(cal.getTime()));
Will Print:
1970-12-31
1971-01-01
1970-12-31
Use the DateFormat
API to convert the String into a Date object, then use the Calendar
API to add one day. Let me know if you want specific code examples, and I can update my answer.
Try this method:
public static Date addDay(int day) {
Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance();
calendar.setTime(new Date());
calendar.add(Calendar.DATE, day);
return calendar.getTime();
}
Calendar
and Date
classes are poorly designed and long outdated, so this is not the recommended way. Prefer LocalDate.now(ZoneId.systemDefault()).plusDays(day)
. Also I can’t see you’re contributing anything essential that isn’t already in the second highest voted answer by Lisa.
Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH
for code readability
It's simple actually. One day contains 86400000 milliSeconds. So first you get the current time in millis from The System by usingSystem.currentTimeMillis()
then add the 84000000 milliSeconds and use the Date
Class to generate A date format for the milliseconds.
Example
String Today = new Date(System.currentTimeMillis()).toString();
String Today will be 2019-05-9
String Tommorow = new Date(System.currentTimeMillis() + 86400000).toString();
String Tommorow will be 2019-05-10
String DayAfterTommorow = new Date(System.currentTimeMillis() + (2 * 86400000)).toString();
String DayAfterTommorow will be 2019-05-11
Date
class that was supplanted years ago by the modern java.time classes. So much simpler to simply use: LocalDate.parse( "2019-01-23" ).plusDays( 1 )
You can use this package from "org.apache.commons.lang3.time":
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
Date myNewDate = DateUtils.addDays(myDate, 4);
Date yesterday = DateUtils.addDays(myDate, -1);
String formatedDate = sdf.format(myNewDate);
Date
class in 2018 is poor advice. The troublesome old date-time classes such as java.util.Date
, java.util.Calendar
, and java.text.SimpleDateFormat
are now legacy, supplanted by the java.time classes built into Java 8 & Java 9. See Tutorial by Oracle. See other Answers using LocalDate
class.
SimpleDateFormat
class unfortunately injects a time zone, implicitly applying the JVM’s current default zone. So the results of this code will vary by whatever the current default is — and that default can change at any moment during runtime.
If you are using Java 8, java.time.LocalDate
and java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter
can make this work quite simple.
public String nextDate(String date){
LocalDate parsedDate = LocalDate.parse(date);
LocalDate addedDate = parsedDate.plusDays(1);
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-mm-dd");
return addedDate.format(formatter);
}
toString()
to produce the string i yyyy-MM-dd format (and if you insist, remember that mm
is minutes while MM
is the month).
Let's clarify the use case: You want to do calendar arithmetic and start/end with a java.util.Date.
Some approaches:
Convert to string and back with SimpleDateFormat: This is an inefficient solution. Convert to LocalDate: You would lose any time-of-day information. Convert to LocalDateTime: This involves more steps and you need to worry about timezone. Convert to epoch with Date.getTime(): This is efficient but you are calculating with milliseconds.
Consider using java.time.Instant:
Date _now = new Date();
Instant _instant = _now.toInstant().minus(5, ChronoUnit.DAYS);
Date _newDate = Date.from(_instant);
Date
with the modern java.time classes such as Instant
. The java.time classes entirely supplant the legacy classes. Specifically, Instant
replaces java.util.Date
.
You can do this just in one line.
e.g to add 5 days
Date newDate = Date.from(Date().toInstant().plus(5, ChronoUnit.DAYS));
to subtract 5 days
Date newDate = Date.from(Date().toInstant().minus(5, ChronoUnit.DAYS));
Date newDate = new Date();
newDate.setDate(newDate.getDate()+1);
System.out.println(newDate);
Sun Apr 30 16:25:33 CEST 2017
comes Mon May 01 16:25:33 CEST 2017
. It’s still a discouraged solution though. Not only is the method deprecated for a good reason, also in 2017 we have very good alternatives to the Date
class.
Success story sharing
add()
will roll the date. See on ideone.java.util.Date
,java.util.Calendar
, andjava.text.SimpleDateFormat
are now legacy, supplanted by the java.time classes built into Java 8 and later. See Tutorial by Oracle.