Measurement of time is built on units, such as years, months, days, hours, minutes and seconds. Implementations of this interface represent those units.
An instance of this interface represents the unit itself, rather than an amount of the unit.
See Period
for a class that represents an amount in terms of the common units.
The most commonly used units are defined in ChronoUnit
.
Further units are supplied in IsoFields
.
Units can also be written by application code by implementing this interface.
The unit works using double dispatch. Client code calls methods on a date-time like
LocalDateTime
which check if the unit is a ChronoUnit
.
If it is, then the date-time must handle it.
Otherwise, the method call is re-dispatched to the matching method in this interface.
Implementation Specification
This interface must be implemented with care to ensure other classes operate correctly. All implementations that can be instantiated must be final, immutable and thread-safe. It is recommended to use an enum where possible.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
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public < the type of the Temporal object R extends Temporal> R | Returns: the adjusted temporal object, not nullthe temporal object to adjust, not null temporal, long the amount of this unit to add, positive or negative amount)Returns a copy of the specified temporal object with the specified period added. |
public long | Returns: the amount of time between temporal1Inclusive and temporal2Exclusive in terms of this unit; positive if temporal2Exclusive is later than temporal1Inclusive, negative if earlierthe base temporal object, not null temporal1Inclusive, Temporal the other temporal object, exclusive, not null temporal2Exclusive)Calculates the amount of time between two temporal objects. |
public Duration | Returns: the duration of this unit, which may be an estimate, not nullGets the duration of this unit, which may be an estimate. |
public boolean | Returns: true if this unit is a component of a dateChecks if this unit represents a component of a date. |
public boolean | Returns: true if the duration is estimated, false if accurateChecks if the duration of the unit is an estimate. |
public default boolean | Returns: true if the unit is supportedthe temporal object to check, not null temporal)Checks if this unit is supported by the specified temporal object. |
public boolean | Returns: true if this unit is a component of a timeChecks if this unit represents a component of a time. |
public String |
addTo | back to summary |
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public <R extends Temporal> R addTo(R temporal, long amount) Returns a copy of the specified temporal object with the specified period added. The period added is a multiple of this unit. For example, this method could be used to add "3 days" to a date by calling this method on the instance representing "days", passing the date and the period "3". The period to be added may be negative, which is equivalent to subtraction.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use // these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisUnit.addTo(temporal); temporal = temporal.plus(thisUnit);It is recommended to use the second approach, plus(TemporalUnit) ,
as it is a lot clearer to read in code.
Implementations should perform any queries or calculations using the units
available in Implementations must not alter the specified temporal object. Instead, an adjusted copy of the original must be returned. This provides equivalent, safe behavior for immutable and mutable implementations.
|
between | back to summary |
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public long between(Temporal temporal1Inclusive, Temporal temporal2Exclusive) Calculates the amount of time between two temporal objects.
This calculates the amount in terms of this unit. The start and end
points are supplied as temporal objects and must be of compatible types.
The implementation will convert the second type to be an instance of the
first type before the calculating the amount.
The result will be negative if the end is before the start.
For example, the amount in hours between two temporal objects can be
calculated using The calculation returns a whole number, representing the number of complete units between the two temporals. For example, the amount in hours between the times 11:30 and 13:29 will only be one hour as it is one minute short of two hours.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use // these two lines are equivalent between = thisUnit.between(start, end); between = start.until(end, thisUnit);The choice should be made based on which makes the code more readable. For example, this method allows the number of days between two dates to be calculated: long daysBetween = DAYS.between(start, end); // or alternatively long daysBetween = start.until(end, DAYS);
Implementations should perform any queries or calculations using the units
available in Implementation Specification Implementations must begin by checking to if the two temporals have the
same type using
|
getDuration | back to summary |
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public Duration getDuration() Gets the duration of this unit, which may be an estimate.
All units return a duration measured in standard nanoseconds from this method.
The duration will be positive and non-zero.
For example, an hour has a duration of
Some units may return an accurate duration while others return an estimate.
For example, days have an estimated duration due to the possibility of
daylight saving time changes.
To determine if the duration is an estimate, use
|
isDateBased | back to summary |
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public boolean isDateBased() Checks if this unit represents a component of a date.
A date is time-based if it can be used to imply meaning from a date.
It must have a duration that is an integral
multiple of the length of a standard day.
Note that it is valid for both
|
isDurationEstimated | back to summary |
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public boolean isDurationEstimated() Checks if the duration of the unit is an estimate. All units have a duration, however the duration is not always accurate. For example, days have an estimated duration due to the possibility of daylight saving time changes. This method returns true if the duration is an estimate and false if it is accurate. Note that accurate/estimated ignores leap seconds.
|
isSupportedBy | back to summary |
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public default boolean isSupportedBy(Temporal temporal) Checks if this unit is supported by the specified temporal object. This checks that the implementing date-time can add/subtract this unit. This can be used to avoid throwing an exception.
This default implementation derives the value using
|
isTimeBased | back to summary |
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public boolean isTimeBased() Checks if this unit represents a component of a time.
A unit is time-based if it can be used to imply meaning from a time.
It must have a duration that divides into
the length of a standard day without remainder.
Note that it is valid for both
|
toString | back to summary |
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public String toString() Gets a descriptive name for the unit. This should be in the plural and upper-first camel case, such as 'Days' or 'Minutes'. |