I tried to calculate the difference between two dates and I noticed one thing. When calculating only the days, the start of daylight saving time is included in the interval, so the result will be shorter with 1 day.
To obtain accurate results, the value of hours also must be considered.
For example:
SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("MM-dd-yyyy");
Date dfrom = format.parse("03-29-2015");
Date dto = format.parse("03-30-2015");
long diff = dto.getTime() - dfrom.getTime();
System.out.println(diff);
System.out.println("Days: "+diff / (24 * 60 * 60 * 1000));
System.out.println("Hours: "+diff / (60 * 60 * 1000) % 24);
Output:
82800000
Days: 0
Hours: 23
Does anybody have a better solution?
Oh yes a better solution there is!
Stop using the outmoded
java.util.Date
class and embrace the power of the java.time API built into Java 8 and later (tutorial). Specifically, theDateTimeFormatter
,LocalDate
, andChronoUnit
classes.