Display date using full names. : Formatter « Development Class « Java






Display date using full names.

  
import java.util.Calendar;
import java.util.Formatter;

public class Main {
  public static void main(String[] argv) throws Exception {
    Formatter fmt = new Formatter();
    Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();

    fmt.format("Long date format: ");
    fmt.format("%tA %1$tB %1$td, %1$tY\n", cal);
    System.out.println(fmt);
  }
}
//Long date format: Monday March 09, 2009

   
    
  








Related examples in the same category

1.Formatter: format(String format, Object... args)
2.Formatter: %g
3.Formatting time and date
4.Demonstrate the %n and %% format specifiers
5.Demonstrate a field-width specifier
6.Create a table of squares and cubes
7.Demonstrate the precision modifier
8.Demonstrate left justification
9.Demonstrate the space format specifiers
10.Limit the number of decimal digits by specifying the precision
11.Using group separators.
12.Show positive values with a leading + and negative values within parentheses.
13.Use Formatter to vertically align numeric values.
14.Use Formatter to left-justify strings within a table.
15.Display several time and date formats
16.using the %t specifier with Formatter.
17.Display 12-hour time format
18.Display 24-hour time format.
19.Display short date format.
20.Display complete time and date information: using %T rather than %t.
21.Display hour and minute, and include AM or PM indicator.
22.The Time and Date Format Suffixes
23.locale-specific formatting.
24.Write formatted output directly to the console and to a file.
25.Formatter.ioException()
26.new Formatter(new OutputStream("test.fmt"))
27.Use arguments indexes to simplify the creation of a custom time and date format
28.Apply a mask to String