Returns the day-of-week in month adjuster, which returns a new date in the same month with the ordinal day-of-week.
Returns the day-of-week in month adjuster, which returns a new date in the same month with the ordinal day-of-week. This is used for expressions like the 'second Tuesday in March'.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-12-15 for (1,TUESDAY) will return 2011-12-06.
The input 2011-12-15 for (2,TUESDAY) will return 2011-12-13.
The input 2011-12-15 for (3,TUESDAY) will return 2011-12-20.
The input 2011-12-15 for (4,TUESDAY) will return 2011-12-27.
The input 2011-12-15 for (5,TUESDAY) will return 2012-01-03.
The input 2011-12-15 for (-1,TUESDAY) will return 2011-12-27 (last in month).
The input 2011-12-15 for (-4,TUESDAY) will return 2011-12-06 (3 weeks before last in month).
The input 2011-12-15 for (-5,TUESDAY) will return 2011-11-29 (4 weeks before last in month).
The input 2011-12-15 for (0,TUESDAY) will return 2011-11-29 (last in previous month).
For a positive or zero ordinal, the algorithm is equivalent to finding the first day-of-week that matches within the month and then adding a number of weeks to it. For a negative ordinal, the algorithm is equivalent to finding the last day-of-week that matches within the month and then subtracting a number of weeks to it. The ordinal number of weeks is not validated and is interpreted leniently according to this algorithm. This definition means that an ordinal of zero finds the last matching day-of-week in the previous month.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems.
It uses the DAY_OF_WEEK
and DAY_OF_MONTH
fields
and the DAYS
unit, and assumes a seven day week.
the week within the month, unbounded but typically from -5 to 5
the day-of-week, not null
the day-of-week in month adjuster, not null
Returns the "first day of month" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the first day of the current month.
Returns the "first day of month" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the first day of the current month.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 will return 2011-01-01.
The input 2011-02-15 will return 2011-02-01.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems. It is equivalent to:
temporal.with(DAY_OF_MONTH, 1);
the first day-of-month adjuster, not null
Returns the "first day of next month" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the first day of the next month.
Returns the "first day of next month" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the first day of the next month.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 will return 2011-02-01.
The input 2011-02-15 will return 2011-03-01.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems. It is equivalent to:
temporal.with(DAY_OF_MONTH, 1).plus(1, MONTHS);
the first day of next month adjuster, not null
Returns the "first day of next year" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the first day of the next year.
Returns the "first day of next year" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the first day of the next year.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 will return 2012-01-01.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems. It is equivalent to:
temporal.with(DAY_OF_YEAR, 1).plus(1, YEARS);
the first day of next month adjuster, not null
Returns the "first day of year" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the first day of the current year.
Returns the "first day of year" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the first day of the current year.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 will return 2011-01-01.
The input 2011-02-15 will return 2011-01-01.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems. It is equivalent to:
temporal.with(DAY_OF_YEAR, 1);
the first day-of-year adjuster, not null
Returns the first in month adjuster, which returns a new date in the same month with the first matching day-of-week.
Returns the first in month adjuster, which returns a new date in the same month with the first matching day-of-week. This is used for expressions like 'first Tuesday in March'.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-12-15 for (MONDAY) will return 2011-12-05.
The input 2011-12-15 for (FRIDAY) will return 2011-12-02.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems.
It uses the DAY_OF_WEEK
and DAY_OF_MONTH
fields
and the DAYS
unit, and assumes a seven day week.
the day-of-week, not null
the first in month adjuster, not null
Returns the "last day of month" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the last day of the current month.
Returns the "last day of month" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the last day of the current month.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 will return 2011-01-31.
The input 2011-02-15 will return 2011-02-28.
The input 2012-02-15 will return 2012-02-29 (leap year).
The input 2011-04-15 will return 2011-04-30.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems. It is equivalent to:
val lastDay: Long = temporal.range(DAY_OF_MONTH).getMaximum(); temporal.with(DAY_OF_MONTH, lastDay);
the last day-of-month adjuster, not null
Returns the "last day of year" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the last day of the current year.
Returns the "last day of year" adjuster, which returns a new date set to the last day of the current year.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 will return 2011-12-31.
The input 2011-02-15 will return 2011-12-31.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems. It is equivalent to:
long lastDay = temporal.range(DAY_OF_YEAR).getMaximum(); temporal.with(DAY_OF_YEAR, lastDay);
the last day-of-year adjuster, not null
Returns the last in month adjuster, which returns a new date in the same month with the last matching day-of-week.
Returns the last in month adjuster, which returns a new date in the same month with the last matching day-of-week. This is used for expressions like 'last Tuesday in March'.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-12-15 for (MONDAY) will return 2011-12-26.
The input 2011-12-15 for (FRIDAY) will return 2011-12-30.
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems.
It uses the DAY_OF_WEEK
and DAY_OF_MONTH
fields
and the DAYS
unit, and assumes a seven day week.
the day-of-week, not null
the first in month adjuster, not null
Returns the next day-of-week adjuster, which adjusts the date to the first occurrence of the specified day-of-week after the date being adjusted.
Returns the next day-of-week adjuster, which adjusts the date to the first occurrence of the specified day-of-week after the date being adjusted.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (MONDAY) will return 2011-01-17 (two days later).
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (WEDNESDAY) will return 2011-01-19 (four days later).
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (SATURDAY) will return 2011-01-22 (seven days later).
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems.
It uses the DAY_OF_WEEK
field and the DAYS
unit,
and assumes a seven day week.
the day-of-week to move the date to, not null
the next day-of-week adjuster, not null
Returns the next-or-same day-of-week adjuster, which adjusts the date to the first occurrence of the specified day-of-week after the date being adjusted unless it is already on that day in which case the same object is returned.
Returns the next-or-same day-of-week adjuster, which adjusts the date to the first occurrence of the specified day-of-week after the date being adjusted unless it is already on that day in which case the same object is returned.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (MONDAY) will return 2011-01-17 (two days later).
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (WEDNESDAY) will return 2011-01-19 (four days later).
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (SATURDAY) will return 2011-01-15 (same as input).
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems.
It uses the DAY_OF_WEEK
field and the DAYS
unit,
and assumes a seven day week.
the day-of-week to check for or move the date to, not null
the next-or-same day-of-week adjuster, not null
Returns the previous day-of-week adjuster, which adjusts the date to the first occurrence of the specified day-of-week before the date being adjusted.
Returns the previous day-of-week adjuster, which adjusts the date to the first occurrence of the specified day-of-week before the date being adjusted.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (MONDAY) will return 2011-01-10 (five days earlier).
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (WEDNESDAY) will return 2011-01-12 (three days earlier).
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (SATURDAY) will return 2011-01-08 (seven days earlier).
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems.
It uses the DAY_OF_WEEK
field and the DAYS
unit,
and assumes a seven day week.
the day-of-week to move the date to, not null
the previous day-of-week adjuster, not null
Returns the previous-or-same day-of-week adjuster, which adjusts the date to the first occurrence of the specified day-of-week before the date being adjusted unless it is already on that day in which case the same object is returned.
Returns the previous-or-same day-of-week adjuster, which adjusts the date to the first occurrence of the specified day-of-week before the date being adjusted unless it is already on that day in which case the same object is returned.
The ISO calendar system behaves as follows:
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (MONDAY) will return 2011-01-10 (five days earlier).
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (WEDNESDAY) will return 2011-01-12 (three days earlier).
The input 2011-01-15 (a Saturday) for parameter (SATURDAY) will return 2011-01-15 (same as input).
The behavior is suitable for use with most calendar systems.
It uses the DAY_OF_WEEK
field and the DAYS
unit,
and assumes a seven day week.
the day-of-week to check for or move the date to, not null
the previous-or-same day-of-week adjuster, not null
Common implementations of
TemporalAdjuster
.This class provides common implementations of
There are two equivalent ways of using aTemporalAdjuster
. They are especially useful to document the intent of business logic and often link well to requirements. For example, these two pieces of code do the same thing, but the second one is clearer (assuming that there is a static import of this class):TemporalAdjuster
. The first is to invoke the method on the interface directly. The second is to useTemporal#with(TemporalAdjuster)
: It is recommended to use the second approach,with(TemporalAdjuster)
, as it is a lot clearer to read in code.Specification for implementors
This is a thread-safe utility class. All returned adjusters are immutable and thread-safe.