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ChronoLocalDate

Extends:

TemporalAccessorTemporal → ChronoLocalDate

Direct Subclass:

LocalDate

A date without time-of-day or time-zone in an arbitrary chronology, intended for advanced globalization use cases.

Most applications should declare method signatures, fields and variables as LocalDate, not this interface.

A ChronoLocalDate is the abstract representation of a date where the Chronology, or calendar system, is pluggable. The date is defined in terms of fields expressed by TemporalField, where most common implementations are defined in ChronoField. The chronology defines how the calendar system operates and the meaning of the standard fields.

When to use this interface

The design of the API encourages the use of LocalDate rather than this interface, even in the case where the application needs to deal with multiple calendar systems. The rationale for this is explored in the following documentation.

The primary use case where this interface should be used is where the generic type parameter C is fully defined as a specific chronology. In that case, the assumptions of that chronology are known at development time and specified in the code.

When the chronology is defined in the generic type parameter as ? or otherwise unknown at development time, the rest of the discussion below applies.

To emphasize the point, declaring a method signature, field or variable as this interface type can initially seem like the sensible way to globalize an application, however it is usually the wrong approach. As such, it should be considered an application-wide architectural decision to choose to use this interface as opposed to LocalDate.

Architectural issues to consider

These are some of the points that must be considered before using this interface throughout an application.

1) Applications using this interface, as opposed to using just LocalDate, face a significantly higher probability of bugs. This is because the calendar system in use is not known at development time. A key cause of bugs is where the developer applies assumptions from their day-to-day knowledge of the ISO calendar system to code that is intended to deal with any arbitrary calendar system. The section below outlines how those assumptions can cause problems The primary mechanism for reducing this increased risk of bugs is a strong code review process. This should also be considered a extra cost in maintenance for the lifetime of the code.

2) This interface does not enforce immutability of implementations. While the implementation notes indicate that all implementations must be immutable there is nothing in the code or type system to enforce this. Any method declared to accept a ChronoLocalDate could therefore be passed a poorly or maliciously written mutable implementation.

3) Applications using this interface must consider the impact of eras. LocalDate shields users from the concept of eras, by ensuring that getYear() returns the proleptic year. That decision ensures that developers can think of LocalDate instances as consisting of three fields - year, month-of-year and day-of-month. By contrast, users of this interface must think of dates as consisting of four fields - era, year-of-era, month-of-year and day-of-month. The extra era field is frequently forgotten, yet it is of vital importance to dates in an arbitrary calendar system. For example, in the Japanese calendar system, the era represents the reign of an Emperor. Whenever one reign ends and another starts, the year-of-era is reset to one.

4) The only agreed international standard for passing a date between two systems is the ISO-8601 standard which requires the ISO calendar system. Using this interface throughout the application will inevitably lead to the requirement to pass the date across a network or component boundary, requiring an application specific protocol or format.

5) Long term persistence, such as a database, will almost always only accept dates in the ISO-8601 calendar system (or the related Julian-Gregorian). Passing around dates in other calendar systems increases the complications of interacting with persistence.

6) Most of the time, passing a ChronoLocalDate throughout an application is unnecessary, as discussed in the last section below.

False assumptions causing bugs in multi-calendar system code

As indicated above, there are many issues to consider when try to use and manipulate a date in an arbitrary calendar system. These are some of the key issues.

Code that queries the day-of-month and assumes that the value will never be more than 31 is invalid. Some calendar systems have more than 31 days in some months.

Code that adds 12 months to a date and assumes that a year has been added is invalid. Some calendar systems have a different number of months, such as 13 in the Coptic or Ethiopic.

Code that adds one month to a date and assumes that the month-of-year value will increase by one or wrap to the next year is invalid. Some calendar systems have a variable number of months in a year, such as the Hebrew.

Code that adds one month, then adds a second one month and assumes that the day-of-month will remain close to its original value is invalid. Some calendar systems have a large difference between the length of the longest month and the length of the shortest month. For example, the Coptic or Ethiopic have 12 months of 30 days and 1 month of 5 days.

Code that adds seven days and assumes that a week has been added is invalid. Some calendar systems have weeks of other than seven days, such as the French Revolutionary.

Code that assumes that because the year of date1 is greater than the year of date2 then date1 is after date2 is invalid. This is invalid for all calendar systems when referring to the year-of-era, and especially untrue of the Japanese calendar system where the year-of-era restarts with the reign of every new Emperor.

Code that treats month-of-year one and day-of-month one as the start of the year is invalid. Not all calendar systems start the year when the month value is one.

In general, manipulating a date, and even querying a date, is wide open to bugs when the calendar system is unknown at development time. This is why it is essential that code using this interface is subjected to additional code reviews. It is also why an architectural decision to avoid this interface type is usually the correct one.

Using LocalDate instead

The primary alternative to using this interface throughout your application is as follows.

  • Declare all method signatures referring to dates in terms of LocalDate.
  • Either store the chronology (calendar system) in the user profile or lookup the chronology from the user locale.
  • Convert the ISO LocalDate to and from the user's preferred calendar system during printing and parsing.

This approach treats the problem of globalized calendar systems as a localization issue and confines it to the UI layer. This approach is in keeping with other localization issues in the java platform.

As discussed above, performing calculations on a date where the rules of the calendar system are pluggable requires skill and is not recommended. Fortunately, the need to perform calculations on a date in an arbitrary calendar system is extremely rare. For example, it is highly unlikely that the business rules of a library book rental scheme will allow rentals to be for one month, where meaning of the month is dependent on the user's preferred calendar system.

A key use case for calculations on a date in an arbitrary calendar system is producing a month-by-month calendar for display and user interaction. Again, this is a UI issue, and use of this interface solely within a few methods of the UI layer may be justified.

In any other part of the system, where a date must be manipulated in a calendar system other than ISO, the use case will generally specify the calendar system to use. For example, an application may need to calculate the next Islamic or Hebrew holiday which may require manipulating the date. This kind of use case can be handled as follows:

  • start from the ISO LocalDate being passed to the method
  • convert the date to the alternate calendar system, which for this use case is known rather than arbitrary
  • perform the calculation
  • convert back to LocalDate

Developers writing low-level frameworks or libraries should also avoid this interface. Instead, one of the two general purpose access interfaces should be used. Use TemporalAccessor if read-only access is required, or use Temporal if read-write access is required.

Specification for implementors

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. Subclasses should be Serializable wherever possible.

Additional calendar systems may be added to the system. See Chronology for more details.

In JDK 8, this is an interface with default methods. Since there are no default methods in JDK 7, an abstract class is used.

Method Summary

Public Methods
public

adjustInto(temporal: *): *

public

format(formatter: DateTimeFormatter): String

Formats this date using the specified formatter.

public

isSupported(fieldOrUnit: *): *

public

query(query: *): *

Inherited Summary

From class TemporalAccessor
public

get(field: TemporalField): number

Gets the value of the specified field as an int.

public

getLong(field: *)

public

isSupported(field: *)

public

query(query: TemporalQuery): *

Queries this date-time.

public

Gets the range of valid values for the specified field.

From class Temporal
public

isSupported(fieldOrUnit: TemporalUnit): boolean

Checks if the specified unit is supported.

public

minus(amount: TemporalAmount | number, unit: TemporalUnit): Temporal

function overloading for Temporal.plus

public

plus(amount: TemporalAmount | number, unit: TemporalUnit): Temporal

function overloading for Temporal.plus

public

until(endTemporal: Temporal, unit: TemporalUnit): number

Calculates the period between this temporal and another temporal in terms of the specified unit.

public

with(adjusterOrField: TemporalAdjuster | TemporalField, newValue: number): Temporal

function overloading for Temporal.with

Public Methods

public adjustInto(temporal: *): * source

Params:

NameTypeAttributeDescription
temporal *

Return:

*

public format(formatter: DateTimeFormatter): String source

Formats this date using the specified formatter.

This date will be passed to the formatter to produce a string.

The default implementation must behave as follows:

 return formatter.format(this);

Params:

NameTypeAttributeDescription
formatter DateTimeFormatter

the formatter to use, not null

Return:

String

the formatted date string, not null

Throw:

*

DateTimeException if an error occurs during printing

public isSupported(fieldOrUnit: *): * source

Checks if the specified unit is supported. This checks if the date-time can be queried for the specified unit. If false, then calling the plus and minus methods will throw an exception.

Specification for implementors

Implementations must check and handle all fields defined in ChronoUnit. If the field is supported, then true is returned, otherwise false If the field is not a ChronoUnit, then the result of this method is obtained by invoking TemporalUnit.isSupportedBy(Temporal) passing this as the argument.

Implementations must not alter this object.

Override:

Temporal#isSupported

Params:

NameTypeAttributeDescription
fieldOrUnit *

Return:

*

public query(query: *): * source

Queries this date-time.

This queries this date-time using the specified query strategy object.

Queries are a key tool for extracting information from date-times. They exists to externalize the process of querying, permitting different approaches, as per the strategy design pattern. Examples might be a query that checks if the date is the day before February 29th in a leap year, or calculates the number of days to your next birthday.

The most common query implementations are method references, such as LocalDate::from and ZoneId::from. Further implementations are on TemporalQueries. Queries may also be defined by applications.

Override:

TemporalAccessor#query

Params:

NameTypeAttributeDescription
query *

Return:

*