Domanda

I work with the new DateTime API of Java 8.

How to convert a LocalDate to an Instant? I get an exception with

LocalDate date = LocalDate.of(2012, 2, 2);
Instant instant = Instant.from(date);

and I don't understand why.

È stato utile?

Soluzione

The Instant class represents an instantaneous point on the time-line. Conversion to and from a LocalDate requires a time-zone. Unlike some other date and time libraries, JSR-310 will not select the time-zone for you automatically, so you must provide it.

LocalDate date = LocalDate.now();
Instant instant = date.atStartOfDay(ZoneId.systemDefault()).toInstant();

This example uses the default time-zone of the JVM - ZoneId.systemDefault() - to perform the conversion. See here for a longer answer to a related question.


Update: The accepted answer uses LocalDateTime::toInstant(ZoneOffset) which only accepts ZoneOffset. This answer uses LocalDate::atStartOfDay(ZoneId) which accepts any ZoneId. As such, this answer is generally more useful (and probably should be the accepted one).

PS. I was the main author of the API

Altri suggerimenti

In order to convert it to an instant you need to have a LocalDateTime instance, e.g.:

LocalDate.now().atStartOfDay().toInstant(ZoneOffset.UTC)

Using this I'm able to get the local datetime Instance:

LocalDateTime.now().toInstant(ZoneOffset.UTC)
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