I'm trying to get my format to be 2016-07-08T00:00:00.000Z.
String myDate = "20160708";
LocalDate myLocalDate = LocalDate.parse(myDate, DateTimeFormatter.BASIC_ISO_DATE);
OffsetDateTime myOffsetDate = myLocalDate.atTime(OffsetTime.now(ZoneOffset.UTC));
System.out.println(myOffsetDate); //2016-07-08T14:58:23.170Z
Well don't say "I want it to use the current time"! That's what this is doing:
OffsetTime.now(ZoneOffset.UTC)
If you just want an OffsetDateTime
from a LocalDate
by providing a zero offset and midnight, you can use:
OffsetDateTime myOffsetDate = myLocalDate
.atTime(LocalTime.MIDNIGHT)
.atOffset(ZoneOffset.UTC);
Or if you prefer:
OffsetDateTime myOffsetDate = myLocalDate
.atTime(OffsetTime.of(LocalTime.MIDNIGHT, ZoneOffset.UTC));
(Personally I prefer the first version, myself...)
Note that that's just getting you the right OffsetDateTime
. If you want to format that with milliseconds and seconds, you'll need to do that explicitly:
DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormatter
.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSX");
System.out.println(myOffsetDate.format(formatter));
As noted in comments, if you're find with a ZonedDateTime
instead of an OffsetDateTime
, you can use
ZonedDateTime myOffsetDate = myLocalDate.atStartOfDay(ZoneOffset.UTC);
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