currentTimeMillis() method returns the current time in milliseconds. The unit of time of the return value is a millisecond, the granularity of the value depends on the underlying operating system and may be larger. For example, many operating systems measure time in units of tens of milliseconds.
A simple solution is to get the timedelta object by finding the difference of the given datetime with Epoch time, i.e., midnight 1 January 1970. To obtain time in milliseconds, you can use the timedelta. total_seconds() * 1000 .
Do you mean?
long millis = System.currentTimeMillis() % 1000;
BTW Windows doesn't allow timetravel to 1969
C:\> date
Enter the new date: (dd-mm-yy) 2/8/1969
The system cannot accept the date entered.
Use Calendar
Calendar.getInstance().get(Calendar.MILLISECOND);
or
Calendar c=Calendar.getInstance();
c.setTime(new Date()); /* whatever*/
//c.setTimeZone(...); if necessary
c.get(Calendar.MILLISECOND);
In practise though I think it will nearly always equal System.currentTimeMillis()%1000; unless someone has leap-milliseconds or some calendar is defined with an epoch not on a second-boundary.
Calendar.getInstance().get(Calendar.MILLISECOND);
I tried a few ones above but they seem to reset @ 1000
This one definately works, and should also take year into consideration
long millisStart = Calendar.getInstance().getTimeInMillis();
and then do the same for end time if needed.
You ask for the fraction of a second of the current time as a number of milliseconds (not count from epoch).
Instant.now() // Get current moment in UTC, then…
.get( ChronoField.MILLI_OF_SECOND ) // interrogate a `TemporalField`.
2017-04-25T03:01:14.113Z →
113
See this code run live at IdeOne.com.
The modern way is with the java.time classes.
Capture the current moment in UTC.
Instant.now()
Use the Instant.get
method to interrogate for the value of a TemporalField
. In our case, the TemporalField
we want is ChronoField.MILLI_OF_SECOND
.
int millis = Instant.now().get( ChronoField.MILLI_OF_SECOND ) ; // Get current moment in UTC, then interrogate a `TemporalField`.
Or do the math yourself.
More likely you are asking this for a specific time zone. The fraction of a second is likely to be the same as with Instant
but there are so many anomalies with time zones, I hesitate to make that assumption.
ZonedDateTime zdt = ZonedDateTime.now( ZoneId.of( "America/Montreal" ) ) ;
Interrogate for the fractional second. The Question asked for milliseconds, but java.time classes use a finer resolution of nanoseconds. That means the number of nanoseconds will range from from 0 to 999,999,999.
long nanosFractionOfSecond = zdt.getNano();
If you truly want milliseconds, truncate the finer data by dividing by one million. For example, a half second is 500,000,000 nanoseconds and also is 500 milliseconds.
long millis = ( nanosFractionOfSecond / 1_000_000L ) ; // Truncate nanoseconds to milliseconds, by a factor of one million.
The java.time framework is built into Java 8 and later. These classes supplant the troublesome old legacy date-time classes such as java.util.Date
, Calendar
, & SimpleDateFormat
.
The Joda-Time project, now in maintenance mode, advises migration to the java.time classes.
To learn more, see the Oracle Tutorial. And search Stack Overflow for many examples and explanations. Specification is JSR 310.
Where to obtain the java.time classes?
The ThreeTen-Extra project extends java.time with additional classes. This project is a proving ground for possible future additions to java.time. You may find some useful classes here such as Interval
, YearWeek
, YearQuarter
, and more.
long timeNow = System.currentTimeMillis();
System.out.println(new Date(timeNow));
Fri Apr 04 14:27:05 PDT 2014
I think you can use Joda-Time to do this. Take a look at the DateTime
class and its getMillisOfSecond
method. Something like
int ms = new DateTime().getMillisOfSecond() ;
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