Calculate date/time difference in java

JavaTime

Java Problem Overview


I want to calculate difference between 2 dates in hours/minutes/seconds.

I have a slight problem with my code here it is :

String dateStart = "11/03/14 09:29:58";
String dateStop = "11/03/14 09:33:43";
  	
// Custom date format
SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("yy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss");  

Date d1 = null;
Date d2 = null;
try {
	d1 = format.parse(dateStart);
	d2 = format.parse(dateStop);
} catch (ParseException e) {
	e.printStackTrace();
}    

// Get msec from each, and subtract.
long diff = d2.getTime() - d1.getTime();
long diffSeconds = diff / 1000;         
long diffMinutes = diff / (60 * 1000);         
long diffHours = diff / (60 * 60 * 1000);                      
System.out.println("Time in seconds: " + diffSeconds + " seconds.");         
System.out.println("Time in minutes: " + diffMinutes + " minutes.");         
System.out.println("Time in hours: " + diffHours + " hours."); 

This should produce :

Time in seconds: 45 seconds.
Time in minutes: 3 minutes.
Time in hours: 0 hours.

However I get this result :

Time in seconds: 225 seconds.
Time in minutes: 3 minutes.
Time in hours: 0 hours.

Can anyone see what I'm doing wrong here ?

Java Solutions


Solution 1 - Java

I would prefer to use suggested java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit class.

long diff = d2.getTime() - d1.getTime();//as given

long seconds = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toSeconds(diff);
long minutes = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes(diff); 

Solution 2 - Java

try

long diffSeconds = diff / 1000 % 60;  
long diffMinutes = diff / (60 * 1000) % 60; 
long diffHours = diff / (60 * 60 * 1000);

NOTE: this assumes that diff is non-negative.

Solution 3 - Java

If you are able to use external libraries I would recommend you to use Joda-Time, noting that:

> Joda-Time is the de facto standard date and time library for Java prior to Java SE 8. Users are now asked to migrate to java.time (JSR-310).

Example for between calculation:

Seconds.between(startDate, endDate);
Days.between(startDate, endDate);

Solution 4 - Java

Since Java 5, you can use java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit to avoid the use of Magic Numbers like 1000 and 60 in your code.

By the way, you should take care to leap seconds in your computation: the last minute of a year may have an additional leap second so it indeed lasts 61 seconds instead of expected 60 seconds. The ISO specification even plan for possibly 61 seconds. You can find detail in java.util.Date javadoc.

Solution 5 - Java

Try this for a friendly representation of time differences (in milliseconds):

String friendlyTimeDiff(long timeDifferenceMilliseconds) {
    long diffSeconds = timeDifferenceMilliseconds / 1000;
    long diffMinutes = timeDifferenceMilliseconds / (60 * 1000);
    long diffHours = timeDifferenceMilliseconds / (60 * 60 * 1000);
    long diffDays = timeDifferenceMilliseconds / (60 * 60 * 1000 * 24);
    long diffWeeks = timeDifferenceMilliseconds / (60 * 60 * 1000 * 24 * 7);
    long diffMonths = (long) (timeDifferenceMilliseconds / (60 * 60 * 1000 * 24 * 30.41666666));
    long diffYears = timeDifferenceMilliseconds / ((long)60 * 60 * 1000 * 24 * 365);

    if (diffSeconds < 1) {
        return "less than a second";
    } else if (diffMinutes < 1) {
        return diffSeconds + " seconds";
    } else if (diffHours < 1) {
        return diffMinutes + " minutes";
    } else if (diffDays < 1) {
        return diffHours + " hours";
    } else if (diffWeeks < 1) {
        return diffDays + " days";
    } else if (diffMonths < 1) {
        return diffWeeks + " weeks";
    } else if (diffYears < 1) {
        return diffMonths + " months";
    } else {
        return diffYears + " years";
    }
}

Solution 6 - Java

Here is a suggestion, using TimeUnit, to obtain each time part and format them.

private static String formatDuration(long duration) {
	long hours = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toHours(duration);
	long minutes = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes(duration) % 60;
	long seconds = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toSeconds(duration) % 60;
	long milliseconds = duration % 1000;
	return String.format("%02d:%02d:%02d,%03d", hours, minutes, seconds, milliseconds);
}

SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm:ss,SSS");
Date startTime = sdf.parse("01:00:22,427");
Date now = sdf.parse("02:06:38,355");
long duration = now.getTime() - startTime.getTime();
System.out.println(formatDuration(duration));
    

The result is: 01:06:15,928

Solution 7 - Java

This is more of a maths problem than a java problem basically.

The result you receive is correct. This because 225 seconds is 3 minutes (when doing an integral division). What you want is the this:

  • divide by 1000 to get the number of seconds -> rest is milliseconds
  • divide that by 60 to get number of minutes -> rest are seconds
  • divide that by 60 to get number of hours -> rest are minutes

or in java:

int millis = diff % 1000;
diff/=1000;
int seconds = diff % 60;
diff/=60;
int minutes = diff % 60;
diff/=60;
hours = diff;

Solution 8 - Java

I know this is an old question, but I ended up doing something slightly different from the accepted answer. People talk about the TimeUnit class, but there were no answers using this in the way OP wanted it.

So here's another solution, should someone come by missing it ;-)

public class DateTesting {
	public static void main(String[] args) {
    	String dateStart = "11/03/14 09:29:58";
	    String dateStop = "11/03/14 09:33:43";

		// Custom date format
    	SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("yy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss");  

	    Date d1 = null;
		Date d2 = null;
    	try {
	        d1 = format.parse(dateStart);
		    d2 = format.parse(dateStop);
    	} catch (ParseException e) {
	        e.printStackTrace();
		}    

    	// Get msec from each, and subtract.
	    long diff = d2.getTime() - d1.getTime();
	
		long days = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toDays(diff);
        long remainingHoursInMillis = diff - TimeUnit.DAYS.toMillis(days);
        long hours = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toHours(remainingHoursInMillis);
        long remainingMinutesInMillis = remainingHoursInMillis - TimeUnit.HOURS.toMillis(hours);
        long minutes = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toMinutes(remainingMinutesInMillis);
        long remainingSecondsInMillis = remainingMinutesInMillis - TimeUnit.MINUTES.toMillis(minutes);
        long seconds = TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toSeconds(remainingSecondsInMillis);
    
        System.out.println("Days: " + days + ", hours: " + hours + ", minutes: " + minutes + ", seconds: " + seconds);
    }
}

Although just calculating the difference yourself can be done, it's not very meaningful to do it like that and I think TimeUnit is a highly overlooked class.

Solution 9 - Java

Create a Date object using the diffence between your times as a constructor,
then use Calendar methods to get values ..

Date diff = new Date(d2.getTime() - d1.getTime());

Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance();
calendar.setTime(diff);
int hours = calendar.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY);
int minutes = calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE);
int seconds = calendar.get(Calendar.SECOND);

Solution 10 - Java

difference-between-two-dates-in-java

Extracted the code from the link

public class TimeDiff {
    /**
     * (For testing purposes)
     *
     */
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Date d1 = new Date();
        try { Thread.sleep(750); } catch(InterruptedException e) { /* ignore */ }      
        Date d0 = new Date(System.currentTimeMillis() - (1000*60*60*24*3)); // About 3 days ago
        long[] diff = TimeDiff.getTimeDifference(d0, d1);

        System.out.printf("Time difference is %d day(s), %d hour(s), %d minute(s), %d second(s) and %d millisecond(s)\n",
                diff[0], diff[1], diff[2], diff[3], diff[4]);
        System.out.printf("Just the number of days = %d\n",
                TimeDiff.getTimeDifference(d0, d1, TimeDiff.TimeField.DAY));
    }

    /**
     * Calculate the absolute difference between two Date without
     * regard for time offsets
     *
     * @param d1 Date one
     * @param d2 Date two
     * @param field The field we're interested in out of
     * day, hour, minute, second, millisecond
     *
     * @return The value of the required field
     */
    public static long getTimeDifference(Date d1, Date d2, TimeField field) {
        return TimeDiff.getTimeDifference(d1, d2)[field.ordinal()];
    }

    /**
     * Calculate the absolute difference between two Date without
     * regard for time offsets
     *
     * @param d1 Date one
     * @param d2 Date two
     * @return The fields day, hour, minute, second and millisecond
     */
    public static long[] getTimeDifference(Date d1, Date d2) {
        long[] result = new long[5];
        Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
        cal.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC"));
        cal.setTime(d1);

        long t1 = cal.getTimeInMillis();
        cal.setTime(d2);

        long diff = Math.abs(cal.getTimeInMillis() - t1);
        final int ONE_DAY = 1000 * 60 * 60 * 24;
        final int ONE_HOUR = ONE_DAY / 24;
        final int ONE_MINUTE = ONE_HOUR / 60;
        final int ONE_SECOND = ONE_MINUTE / 60;

        long d = diff / ONE_DAY;
        diff %= ONE_DAY;

        long h = diff / ONE_HOUR;
        diff %= ONE_HOUR;

        long m = diff / ONE_MINUTE;
        diff %= ONE_MINUTE;

        long s = diff / ONE_SECOND;
        long ms = diff % ONE_SECOND;
        result[0] = d;
        result[1] = h;
        result[2] = m;
        result[3] = s;
        result[4] = ms;

        return result;
    }

    public static void printDiffs(long[] diffs) {
        System.out.printf("Days:         %3d\n", diffs[0]);
        System.out.printf("Hours:        %3d\n", diffs[1]);
        System.out.printf("Minutes:      %3d\n", diffs[2]);
        System.out.printf("Seconds:      %3d\n", diffs[3]);
        System.out.printf("Milliseconds: %3d\n", diffs[4]);
    }

    public static enum TimeField {DAY,
        HOUR,
        MINUTE,
        SECOND,
        MILLISECOND;
    }
}

Solution 11 - Java

// d1, d2 are dates
long diff = d2.getTime() - d1.getTime();

long diffSeconds = diff / 1000 % 60;
long diffMinutes = diff / (60 * 1000) % 60;
long diffHours = diff / (60 * 60 * 1000) % 24;
long diffDays = diff / (24 * 60 * 60 * 1000);

System.out.print(diffDays + " days, ");
System.out.print(diffHours + " hours, ");
System.out.print(diffMinutes + " minutes, ");
System.out.print(diffSeconds + " seconds.");

Solution 12 - Java

Joda-Time

Joda-Time 2.3 library offers already-debugged code for this chore.

Joad-Time includes three classes to represent a span of time: Period, Interval, and Duration. Period tracks a span as a number of months, days, hours, etc. (not tied to the timeline).

// © 2013 Basil Bourque. This source code may be used freely forever by anyone taking full responsibility for doing so.

// Specify a time zone rather than rely on default.
// Necessary to handle Daylight Saving Time (DST) and other anomalies.
DateTimeZone timeZone = DateTimeZone.forID( "America/Montreal" );

DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormat.forPattern( "yy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss" ).withZone( timeZone ); 

DateTime dateTimeStart = formatter.parseDateTime( "11/03/14 09:29:58" );
DateTime dateTimeStop = formatter.parseDateTime( "11/03/14 09:33:43" );
Period period = new Period( dateTimeStart, dateTimeStop );

PeriodFormatter periodFormatter = PeriodFormat.getDefault();
String output = periodFormatter.print( period );

System.out.println( "output: " + output );

When run…

output: 3 minutes and 45 seconds

Solution 13 - Java

Here is my code.

import java.util.Date;

// to calculate difference between two days
public class DateDifference {

// to calculate difference between two dates in milliseconds
public long getDateDiffInMsec(Date da, Date db) {
	long diffMSec = 0;
	diffMSec = db.getTime() - da.getTime();
	return diffMSec;
}

// to convert Milliseconds into DD HH:MM:SS format.
public String getDateFromMsec(long diffMSec) {
	int left = 0;
	int ss = 0;
	int mm = 0;
	int hh = 0;
	int dd = 0;
	left = (int) (diffMSec / 1000);
	ss = left % 60;
	left = (int) left / 60;
	if (left > 0) {
		mm = left % 60;
		left = (int) left / 60;
		if (left > 0) {
			hh = left % 24;
			left = (int) left / 24;
			if (left > 0) {
				dd = left;
			}
		}
	}
	String diff = Integer.toString(dd) + " " + Integer.toString(hh) + ":"
			+ Integer.toString(mm) + ":" + Integer.toString(ss);
	return diff;

}
}

Solution 14 - Java

long diffSeconds = (diff / 1000)%60;
try this and let me know if it works correctly...

Solution 15 - Java

Well, I'll try yet another code sample:

/**
 * Calculates the number of FULL days between to dates
 * @param startDate must be before endDate
 * @param endDate must be after startDate
 * @return number of day between startDate and endDate
 */
public static int daysBetween(Calendar startDate, Calendar endDate) {
    long start = startDate.getTimeInMillis();
    long end = endDate.getTimeInMillis();
    // It's only approximation due to several bugs (@see java.util.Date) and different precision in Calendar chosen
    // by user (ex. day is time-quantum).
    int presumedDays = (int) TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS.toDays(end - start);
    startDate.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, presumedDays);
    // if we still didn't reach endDate try it with the step of one day
    if (startDate.before(endDate)) {
        startDate.add(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, 1);
        ++presumedDays;
    }
    // if we crossed endDate then we must go back, because the boundary day haven't completed yet
    if (startDate.after(endDate)) {
        --presumedDays;
    }
    return presumedDays;
}

Solution 16 - Java

Date startTime = new Date();
//...
//... lengthy jobs
//...
Date endTime = new Date();
long diff = endTime.getTime() - startTime.getTime();
String hrDateText = DurationFormatUtils.formatDuration(diff, "d 'day(s)' H 'hour(s)' m 'minute(s)' s 'second(s)' ");
System.out.println("Duration : " + hrDateText);


You can use Apache Commons Duration Format Utils. It formats like SimpleDateFormatter

Output:

0 days(s) 0 hour(s) 0 minute(s) 1 second(s)

Solution 17 - Java

As said before - think this is a good answer

/**
 * @param d2 the later date 
 * @param d1 the earlier date
 * @param timeUnit - Example Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY
 * @return
 */
public static int getTimeDifference(Date d2,Date d1, int timeUnit) {
	 Date diff = new Date(d2.getTime() - d1.getTime());

	 Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance();
	 calendar.setTime(diff);
	 int hours = calendar.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY);
	 int minutes = calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE);
	 int seconds = calendar.get(Calendar.SECOND);
	 if(timeUnit==Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY)
		 return hours;
	 if(timeUnit==Calendar.MINUTE)
		 return minutes;
	 return seconds;
 }

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