385

I know there are lots of questions on SO about how to get Dates in Java, but I want an example using new Java 8 Date API. I also know about the JodaTime library, but I want a method without relying on external libraries.

The function needs to be compliant with these restrictions:

  1. Prevent errors from date savetime
  2. Inputs are two Date objects (without time, I know about LocalDateTime, but I need to do this with Date instances)
5
  • 3
    Something like this for example? Commented Nov 18, 2014 at 23:22
  • 2
    @MadProgrammer Not really - Duration is not the best fit to do that... Commented Nov 19, 2014 at 9:53
  • @assylias Well, it's better than what the OP had Commented Nov 19, 2014 at 9:54
  • @assylias Then what is? Commented Nov 19, 2014 at 9:55
  • 18
    @MadProgrammer DAYS.between(localDate1, localDate2). Commented Nov 19, 2014 at 9:59

14 Answers 14

649

If you want logical calendar days, use DAYS.between() method from java.time.temporal.ChronoUnit:

LocalDate dateBefore;
LocalDate dateAfter;
long daysBetween = ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(dateBefore, dateAfter);

If you want literal 24 hour days, (a duration), you can use the Duration class instead:

LocalDate today = LocalDate.now()
LocalDate yesterday = today.minusDays(1);
// Duration oneDay = Duration.between(today, yesterday); // throws an exception
Duration.between(today.atStartOfDay(), yesterday.atStartOfDay()).toDays() // another option

For more information, refer to this document: Java SE 8 Date and Time.

Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

6 Comments

That throws an exception, because the Duration.between method requires temporal objects capable of supporting the SECONDS unit. Instead, try Duration.between(today.atTime(0, 0), yesterday.atTime(0, 0)).toDays().
Instead of today.atTime(0, 0) you can do today.atStartOfDay().
@REACHUS Maybe the -1 was a bit harsh because the code you propose works, but Duration is meant to measure "time-based amounts of time". There is a built-in way to measure a number of days which does not require converting from date to datetime.
The better answer for LocalDate's is @Sunil B's answer below: ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(firstDate, secondDate)
@Lappro why is it better? It uses the same method as my answer
|
203

Based on VGR's comments here is what you can use:

ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(firstDate, secondDate)

1 Comment

This solution should be the accepted answer since it is more concise.
66

You can use until:

LocalDate independenceDay = LocalDate.of(2014, Month.JULY, 4);
LocalDate christmas = LocalDate.of(2014, Month.DECEMBER, 25);

System.out.println("Until christmas: " + independenceDay.until(christmas));
System.out.println("Until christmas (with crono): " 
   + independenceDay.until(christmas, ChronoUnit.DAYS));

Output:

Until christmas: P5M21D
Until christmas (with crono): 174

As mentioned in a comment, if no unit is specified until returns Period.

Snippet from the documentation:

A date-based amount of time in the ISO-8601 calendar system, such as '2 years, 3 months and 4 days'.
This class models a quantity or amount of time in terms of years, months, and days. See Duration for the time-based equivalent to this class.

2 Comments

The gotcha I just encountered with the first version of until is that it returns a Period object. That'll return a number of years/months/days between the two dates, not the actual number of days. And getDays() on the Period only returns the days part (not taking into account the number of years or months), rather than the total number of days. The second version works exactly as desired to get a number of days between two dates.
Is there's a complete alternative for this for this ? Since it needs Android SDk 26 and above
25

DAYS.between

You can use DAYS.between from java.time.temporal.ChronoUnit

e.g.

import java.time.temporal.ChronoUnit;
...

long totalDaysBetween(LocalDate dateBefore, LocalDate dateAfter) {
    return DAYS.between(dateBefore, dateAfter);

Comments

20

If startDate and endDate are instance of java.util.Date

We can use the between( ) method from ChronoUnit enum:

public long between(Temporal temporal1Inclusive, Temporal temporal2Exclusive) {
    //..
}

ChronoUnit.DAYS count days which completed 24 hours.

import java.time.temporal.ChronoUnit;

ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(startDate.toInstant(), endDate.toInstant());

//OR 

ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(Instant.ofEpochMilli(startDate.getTime()), Instant.ofEpochMilli(endDate.getTime()));

Comments

12

Everyone is saying to use ChronoUnit.DAYS.between but that just delegates to another method you could call yourself. So you could also do firstDate.until(secondDate, ChronoUnit.DAYS).

The docs for both actually mention both approaches and say to use whichever one is more readable.

1 Comment

FWIW... I'm not sure why both exist. Are there times that one is more readable and times that the other is? When/why?
11

Use the DAYS in enum java.time.temporal.ChronoUnit . Below is the Sample Code :

Output : *Number of days between the start date : 2015-03-01 and end date : 2016-03-03 is ==> 368. **Number of days between the start date : 2016-03-03 and end date : 2015-03-01 is ==> -368*

package com.bitiknow.date;

import java.time.LocalDate;
import java.time.temporal.ChronoUnit;

/**
 * 
 * @author pradeep
 *
 */
public class LocalDateTimeTry {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        // Date in String format.
        String dateString = "2015-03-01";

        // Converting date to Java8 Local date
        LocalDate startDate = LocalDate.parse(dateString);
        LocalDate endtDate = LocalDate.now();
        // Range = End date - Start date
        Long range = ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(startDate, endtDate);
        System.out.println("Number of days between the start date : " + dateString + " and end date : " + endtDate
                + " is  ==> " + range);

        range = ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(endtDate, startDate);
        System.out.println("Number of days between the start date : " + endtDate + " and end date : " + dateString
                + " is  ==> " + range);

    }

}

Comments

7

Get number of days before Christmas from current day , try this

System.out.println(ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(LocalDate.now(),LocalDate.of(Year.now().getValue(), Month.DECEMBER, 25)));

Comments

6

Here you go:

public class DemoDate {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        LocalDate today = LocalDate.now();
        System.out.println("Current date: " + today);

        //add 1 month to the current date
        LocalDate date2 = today.plus(1, ChronoUnit.MONTHS);
        System.out.println("Next month: " + date2);

        // Put latest date 1st and old date 2nd in 'between' method to get -ve date difference
        long daysNegative = ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(date2, today);
        System.out.println("Days : "+daysNegative);

        // Put old date 1st and new date 2nd in 'between' method to get +ve date difference
        long datePositive = ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(today, date2);
        System.out.println("Days : "+datePositive);
    }
}

Comments

5

Use the class or method that best meets your needs:

  • the Duration class,
  • Period class,
  • or the ChronoUnit.between method.

A Duration measures an amount of time using time-based values (seconds, nanoseconds).

A Period uses date-based values (years, months, days).

The ChronoUnit.between method is useful when you want to measure an amount of time in a single unit of time only, such as days or seconds.

https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/datetime/iso/period.html

Comments

4

get days between two dates date is instance of java.util.Date

public static long daysBetweenTwoDates(Date dateFrom, Date dateTo) {
            return DAYS.between(Instant.ofEpochMilli(dateFrom.getTime()), Instant.ofEpochMilli(dateTo.getTime()));
        }

Comments

4

If the goal is just to get the difference in days and since the above answers mention about delegate methods would like to point out that once can also simply use -

public long daysInBetween(java.time.LocalDate startDate, java.time.LocalDate endDate) {
  // Check for null values here

  return endDate.toEpochDay() - startDate.toEpochDay();
}

1 Comment

In fall in the trap to use ' Period.between(date1, date2).getDays()' without realizing that you loose the months and years of the difference.
4

I know this question is for Java 8, but with Java 9 you could use:

public static List<LocalDate> getDatesBetween(LocalDate startDate, LocalDate endDate) {
    return startDate.datesUntil(endDate)
      .collect(Collectors.toList());
}

Comments

1
import java.time.LocalDate;
import java.time.temporal.ChronoUnit;

LocalDate dateBefore =  LocalDate.of(2020, 05, 20);
LocalDate dateAfter = LocalDate.now();
    
long daysBetween =  ChronoUnit.DAYS.between(dateBefore, dateAfter);
long monthsBetween= ChronoUnit.MONTHS.between(dateBefore, dateAfter);
long yearsBetween= ChronoUnit.YEARS.between(dateBefore, dateAfter);
    
System.out.println(daysBetween);

2 Comments

java.time.temporal.ChronoUnit java 8 implemancation
Please don't post only code as answer, but also provide an explanation what your code does and how it solves the problem of the question. Answers with an explanation are usually more helpful and of better quality, and are more likely to attract upvotes.

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