I'm receiving a db2 date as 1200703 to the mobile as the response. I need to convert that date to a readable format as YYYYMMDD. How can I do that from the android side?
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Have you seen these answers: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10320918/db2-date-format – jmizv Aug 05 '20 at 05:27
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yes, but they are SQL queries. I need some java code to convert the db2 date from the mobile side – Udara Abeythilake Aug 05 '20 at 05:30
2 Answers
This is not db2 date format, but rather the way some systems store a date. It's so called CYYMMDD
integer format.
YEAR = 1900 + 100*C + YY
MONTH = MM
DAY = DD

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The date string, 1200703
is in CYYMMDD
format. This format was (I'm not sure if it is still in use as the last time when I used DB2 was in 2008) used by DB2.
In order to calculate the year, you need to use the following formula:
Year = 100 * C + 1900 + YY
e.g. for CYY = 120
, the value of year = 100 * 1 + 1900 + 20 = 2020
.
Once you convert the CYY
part into yyyy
format, you can use date-time formatting API as shown below:
import java.text.ParseException;
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat;
import java.time.LocalDate;
import java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter;
import java.util.Date;
public class Main {
public static void main(String args[]) {
// Given date string
String dateStr = "1200703";
// Convert the given date string into yyyyMMdd format
int c = Integer.parseInt(dateStr.substring(0, 1));
int yy = Integer.parseInt(dateStr.substring(1, 3));
int year = 100 * c + 1900 + yy;
String dateStrConverted = String.valueOf(year) + dateStr.substring(3);
// ########## For Java 8 onwards ##############
// Define a formatter
DateTimeFormatter dtf = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyyMMdd");
LocalDate localDate = LocalDate.parse(dateStrConverted, dtf);
System.out.println("Default format: " + localDate);
// Printing the date in a sample custom format
DateTimeFormatter dtf1 = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("EEE MMM dd yyyy");
String strDate1 = dtf1.format(localDate);
System.out.println(strDate1);
// ############################################
// ############## Before Java 8 ###############
// Define a formatter
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyyMMdd");
Date utilDate = null;
try {
utilDate = sdf.parse(dateStrConverted);
} catch (ParseException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
System.out.println("Default format: " + utilDate);
// Printing the date in a sample custom format
SimpleDateFormat sdf1 = new SimpleDateFormat("EEE MMM dd yyyy");
String strDate2 = sdf1.format(utilDate);
System.out.println(strDate2);
// ############################################
}
}
Output:
Default format: 2020-07-03
Fri Jul 03 2020
Default format: Fri Jul 03 00:00:00 BST 2020
Fri Jul 03 2020
Note: I recommend you use the modern date-time API. If the Android version which you are using is not compatible with Java-8, I suggest you backport using ThreeTen-Backport library. However, if you want to use the legacy API, you can use do so as shown in the answer.

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Actually, the data type in Db2 is not a String. It's some numeric data type like INT or DECIMAL. So, if you convert it to String, you should pad it with zeroes at the left to get a String of 7 characters. You get wrong result on dates of 20-th century otherwise. I.e. `1900-01-01` comes as `101`, and not as `0000101`. – Mark Barinstein Aug 05 '20 at 11:14