I am trying to format a MonthDay
object in a way that I do not have to specify the order. I am trying to use a localized DateTimeFormatter
.
I have this code:
LocalDate datetime = LocalDate.parse("2017-08-11", DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd"));
MonthDay monthday = MonthDay.from(datetime);
System.out.println(monthday.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MMMM dd").withLocale(Locale.ENGLISH)));
System.out.println(monthday.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MMMM dd").withLocale(Locale.GERMANY)));
System.out.println(monthday.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MMMM dd").withLocale(Locale.forLanguageTag("UK"))));
System.out.println(datetime.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofLocalizedDate(FormatStyle.MEDIUM).withLocale(Locale.ENGLISH)));
System.out.println(datetime.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofLocalizedDate(FormatStyle.MEDIUM).withLocale(Locale.forLanguageTag("UK"))));
// next line throws exception for java.time.temporal.UnsupportedTemporalTypeException: Unsupported field: YearOfEra
System.out.println(monthday.format(DateTimeFormatter.ofLocalizedDate(FormatStyle.MEDIUM).withLocale(Locale.forLanguageTag("UK"))));
The first 3 prints will print as expected the translated Month and day, but it is always month and then day. It does not change the order because I am explicitly telling it the order.
The next two (before the exception) would print respectively:
Aug 11, 2017
11 серп. 2017
Notice how the day is either before or after the month depending on the locale passed to the function. How do I do this with a MonthDay
object as the last line throws an exception when done in this way.
The other answers given so far describe the limitations of the standard DateTimeFormatter
, see also the unsolved related JDK-issue. The suggested workaround to edit the localized date pattern by removing "y" etc. is tricky and might not work for all locales due to the existence of other localized literals inside the pattern.
However, you might also consider using external libraries which have a stronger focus on internationalization issues and have the capability to format a month-day-object using just the locale information. So the locale determines the order of field components and also dots, spaces or other special literals (like in Chinese).
Here two options with the necessary type conversions related to your system timezone:
MonthDay md = MonthDay.now();
GregorianCalendar gcal =
new GregorianCalendar(
2000, // avoids possible leap year problems
md.getMonthValue() - 1,
md.getDayOfMonth()
);
DateFormat df =
DateFormat.getInstanceForSkeleton(
DateFormat.ABBR_MONTH_DAY,
Locale.forLanguageTag("en")
);
System.out.println(df.format(gcal.getTime())); // Aug 15
DateFormat df2 =
DateFormat.getInstanceForSkeleton(
DateFormat.ABBR_MONTH_DAY,
Locale.forLanguageTag("de")
);
System.out.println(df2.format(gcal.getTime())); // 15. Aug.
DateFormat df3 =
DateFormat.getInstanceForSkeleton(DateFormat.MONTH_DAY, Locale.forLanguageTag("zh"));
System.out.println(df3.format(gcal.getTime())); // 8月15日
MonthDay md = MonthDay.now();
ChronoFormatter<AnnualDate> cf1 =
ChronoFormatter.ofStyle(DisplayMode.SHORT, Locale.GERMAN, AnnualDate.chronology());
System.out.println(cf1.format(AnnualDate.from(md))); // 15.8.
ChronoFormatter<AnnualDate> cf2 =
ChronoFormatter.ofStyle(DisplayMode.MEDIUM, Locale.GERMAN, AnnualDate.chronology());
System.out.println(cf2.format(AnnualDate.from(md))); // 15.08.
ChronoFormatter<AnnualDate> cf3 =
ChronoFormatter.ofStyle(DisplayMode.LONG, Locale.ENGLISH, AnnualDate.chronology());
System.out.println(cf3.format(AnnualDate.from(md))); // Aug 15
ChronoFormatter<AnnualDate> cf4 =
ChronoFormatter.ofStyle(DisplayMode.FULL, Locale.GERMAN, AnnualDate.chronology());
System.out.println(cf4.format(AnnualDate.from(md))); // 15. August
ChronoFormatter<AnnualDate> cf5 =
ChronoFormatter.ofStyle(DisplayMode.FULL, Locale.CHINESE, AnnualDate.chronology());
System.out.println(cf5.format(AnnualDate.from(md))); // 8月15日
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