public interface TemporalField
Date and time is expressed using fields which partition the time-line into something meaningful for humans. Implementations of this interface represent those fields.
The most commonly used units are defined in ChronoField
.
Further fields are supplied in IsoFields
, WeekFields
and JulianFields
.
Fields can also be written by application code by implementing this interface.
The field works using double dispatch. Client code calls methods on a date-time like
LocalDateTime
which check if the field is a ChronoField
.
If it is, then the date-time must handle it.
Otherwise, the method call is re-dispatched to the matching method in this interface.
Serializable
where possible.
An enum is as effective implementation choice.Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
<R extends Temporal> |
adjustInto(R temporal,
long newValue)
Returns a copy of the specified temporal object with the value of this field set.
|
TemporalUnit |
getBaseUnit()
Gets the unit that the field is measured in.
|
default String |
getDisplayName(Locale locale)
Gets the display name for the field in the requested locale.
|
long |
getFrom(TemporalAccessor temporal)
Gets the value of this field from the specified temporal object.
|
TemporalUnit |
getRangeUnit()
Gets the range that the field is bound by.
|
boolean |
isDateBased()
Checks if this field represents a component of a date.
|
boolean |
isSupportedBy(TemporalAccessor temporal)
Checks if this field is supported by the temporal object.
|
boolean |
isTimeBased()
Checks if this field represents a component of a time.
|
ValueRange |
range()
Gets the range of valid values for the field.
|
ValueRange |
rangeRefinedBy(TemporalAccessor temporal)
Get the range of valid values for this field using the temporal object to
refine the result.
|
default TemporalAccessor |
resolve(Map<TemporalField,Long> fieldValues,
TemporalAccessor partialTemporal,
ResolverStyle resolverStyle)
Resolves this field to provide a simpler alternative or a date.
|
String |
toString()
Gets a descriptive name for the field.
|
default String getDisplayName(Locale locale)
If there is no display name for the locale then a suitable default must be returned.
The default implementation must check the locale is not null
and return toString()
.
locale
- the locale to use, not nullTemporalUnit getBaseUnit()
The unit of the field is the period that varies within the range.
For example, in the field 'MonthOfYear', the unit is 'Months'.
See also getRangeUnit()
.
TemporalUnit getRangeUnit()
The range of the field is the period that the field varies within.
For example, in the field 'MonthOfYear', the range is 'Years'.
See also getBaseUnit()
.
The range is never null. For example, the 'Year' field is shorthand for 'YearOfForever'. It therefore has a unit of 'Years' and a range of 'Forever'.
ValueRange range()
All fields can be expressed as a long
integer.
This method returns an object that describes the valid range for that value.
This method is generally only applicable to the ISO-8601 calendar system.
Note that the result only describes the minimum and maximum valid values and it is important not to read too much into them. For example, there could be values within the range that are invalid for the field.
boolean isDateBased()
A field is date-based if it can be derived from
EPOCH_DAY
.
Note that it is valid for both isDateBased()
and isTimeBased()
to return false, such as when representing a field like minute-of-week.
boolean isTimeBased()
A field is time-based if it can be derived from
NANO_OF_DAY
.
Note that it is valid for both isDateBased()
and isTimeBased()
to return false, such as when representing a field like minute-of-week.
boolean isSupportedBy(TemporalAccessor temporal)
This determines whether the temporal accessor supports this field. If this returns false, then the temporal cannot be queried for this field.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use TemporalAccessor.isSupported(TemporalField)
:
// these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisField.isSupportedBy(temporal); temporal = temporal.isSupported(thisField);It is recommended to use the second approach,
isSupported(TemporalField)
,
as it is a lot clearer to read in code.
Implementations should determine whether they are supported using the fields
available in ChronoField
.
temporal
- the temporal object to query, not nullValueRange rangeRefinedBy(TemporalAccessor temporal)
This uses the temporal object to find the range of valid values for the field.
This is similar to range()
, however this method refines the result
using the temporal. For example, if the field is DAY_OF_MONTH
the
range
method is not accurate as there are four possible month lengths,
28, 29, 30 and 31 days. Using this method with a date allows the range to be
accurate, returning just one of those four options.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use TemporalAccessor.range(TemporalField)
:
// these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisField.rangeRefinedBy(temporal); temporal = temporal.range(thisField);It is recommended to use the second approach,
range(TemporalField)
,
as it is a lot clearer to read in code.
Implementations should perform any queries or calculations using the fields
available in ChronoField
.
If the field is not supported an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException
must be thrown.
temporal
- the temporal object used to refine the result, not nullDateTimeException
- if the range for the field cannot be obtainedUnsupportedTemporalTypeException
- if the field is not supported by the temporallong getFrom(TemporalAccessor temporal)
This queries the temporal object for the value of this field.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use TemporalAccessor.getLong(TemporalField)
(or TemporalAccessor.get(TemporalField)
):
// these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisField.getFrom(temporal); temporal = temporal.getLong(thisField);It is recommended to use the second approach,
getLong(TemporalField)
,
as it is a lot clearer to read in code.
Implementations should perform any queries or calculations using the fields
available in ChronoField
.
If the field is not supported an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException
must be thrown.
temporal
- the temporal object to query, not nullDateTimeException
- if a value for the field cannot be obtainedUnsupportedTemporalTypeException
- if the field is not supported by the temporalArithmeticException
- if numeric overflow occurs<R extends Temporal> R adjustInto(R temporal, long newValue)
This returns a new temporal object based on the specified one with the value for
this field changed. For example, on a LocalDate
, this could be used to
set the year, month or day-of-month.
The returned object has the same observable type as the specified object.
In some cases, changing a field is not fully defined. For example, if the target object is a date representing the 31st January, then changing the month to February would be unclear. In cases like this, the implementation is responsible for resolving the result. Typically it will choose the previous valid date, which would be the last valid day of February in this example.
There are two equivalent ways of using this method.
The first is to invoke this method directly.
The second is to use Temporal.with(TemporalField, long)
:
// these two lines are equivalent, but the second approach is recommended temporal = thisField.adjustInto(temporal); temporal = temporal.with(thisField);It is recommended to use the second approach,
with(TemporalField)
,
as it is a lot clearer to read in code.
Implementations should perform any queries or calculations using the fields
available in ChronoField
.
If the field is not supported an UnsupportedTemporalTypeException
must be thrown.
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.
R
- the type of the Temporal objecttemporal
- the temporal object to adjust, not nullnewValue
- the new value of the fieldDateTimeException
- if the field cannot be setUnsupportedTemporalTypeException
- if the field is not supported by the temporalArithmeticException
- if numeric overflow occursdefault TemporalAccessor resolve(Map<TemporalField,Long> fieldValues, TemporalAccessor partialTemporal, ResolverStyle resolverStyle)
This method is invoked during the resolve phase of parsing.
It is designed to allow application defined fields to be simplified into
more standard fields, such as those on ChronoField
, or into a date.
Applications should not normally invoke this method directly.
The specified map contains the current state of the parse. The map is mutable and must be mutated to resolve the field and any related fields. This method will only be invoked during parsing if the map contains this field, and implementations should therefore assume this field is present.
Resolving a field will consist of looking at the value of this field,
and potentially other fields, and either updating the map with a
simpler value, such as a ChronoField
, or returning a
complete ChronoLocalDate
. If a resolve is successful,
the code must remove all the fields that were resolved from the map,
including this field.
For example, the IsoFields
class contains the quarter-of-year
and day-of-quarter fields. The implementation of this method in that class
resolves the two fields plus the YEAR
into a
complete LocalDate
. The resolve method will remove all three
fields from the map before returning the LocalDate
.
A partially complete temporal is used to allow the chronology and zone
to be queried. In general, only the chronology will be needed.
Querying items other than the zone or chronology is undefined and
must not be relied on.
The behavior of other methods such as get
, getLong
,
range
and isSupported
is unpredictable and the results undefined.
If resolution should be possible, but the data is invalid, the resolver
style should be used to determine an appropriate level of leniency, which
may require throwing a DateTimeException
or ArithmeticException
.
If no resolution is possible, the resolve method must return null.
When resolving time fields, the map will be altered and null returned.
When resolving date fields, the date is normally returned from the method,
with the map altered to remove the resolved fields. However, it would also
be acceptable for the date fields to be resolved into other ChronoField
instances that can produce a date, such as EPOCH_DAY
.
Not all TemporalAccessor
implementations are accepted as return values.
Implementations that call this method must accept ChronoLocalDate
,
ChronoLocalDateTime
, ChronoZonedDateTime
and LocalTime
.
The default implementation must return null.
fieldValues
- the map of fields to values, which can be updated, not nullpartialTemporal
- the partially complete temporal to query for zone and
chronology; querying for other things is undefined and not recommended, not nullresolverStyle
- the requested type of resolve, not nullArithmeticException
- if numeric overflow occursDateTimeException
- if resolving results in an error. This must not be thrown
by querying a field on the temporal without first checking if it is supportedString toString()
The should be of the format 'BaseOfRange', such as 'MonthOfYear',
unless the field has a range of FOREVER
, when only
the base unit is mentioned, such as 'Year' or 'Era'.
Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2022, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.