Months are zero-based in Calendar. So 12 is interpreted as december + 1 month. Use
c.set(year, month - 1, day, 0, 0);
That's my favorite way prior to Java 8:
Date date = new GregorianCalendar(year, month - 1, day).getTime();
I'd say this is a cleaner approach than:
calendar.set(year, month - 1, day, 0, 0);
Using java.time
framework built into Java 8
int year = 2015;
int month = 12;
int day = 22;
LocalDate.of(year, month, day); //2015-12-22
LocalDate.parse("2015-12-22"); //2015-12-22
//with custom formatter
DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("dd-MM-yyyy");
LocalDate.parse("22-12-2015", formatter); //2015-12-22
If you need also information about time(hour,minute,second) use some conversion from LocalDate
to LocalDateTime
LocalDate.parse("2015-12-22").atStartOfDay() //2015-12-22T00:00
Java's Calendar representation is not the best, they are working on it for Java 8. I would advise you to use Joda Time or another similar library.
Here is a quick example using LocalDate from the Joda Time library:
LocalDate localDate = new LocalDate(year, month, day);
Date date = localDate.toDate();
Here you can follow a quick start tutorial.
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