org.joda.time
Class Period

java.lang.Object
  extended by org.joda.time.base.AbstractPeriod
      extended by org.joda.time.base.BasePeriod
          extended by org.joda.time.Period
All Implemented Interfaces:
Serializable, ReadablePeriod

public final class Period
extends BasePeriod
implements ReadablePeriod, Serializable

An immutable time period specifying a set of duration field values.

A time period is divided into a number of fields, such as hours and seconds. Which fields are supported is defined by the PeriodType class. The default is the standard period type, which supports years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, seconds and millis.

When this time period is added to an instant, the effect is of adding each field in turn. As a result, this takes into account daylight savings time. Adding a time period of 1 day to the day before daylight savings starts will only add 23 hours rather than 24 to ensure that the time remains the same. If this is not the behaviour you want, then see Duration.

The definition of a period also affects the equals method. A period of 1 day is not equal to a period of 24 hours, nor 1 hour equal to 60 minutes. This is because periods represent an abstracted definition of a time period (eg. a day may not actually be 24 hours, it might be 23 or 25 at daylight savings boundary). To compare the actual duration of two periods, convert both to durations using toDuration, an operation that emphasises that the result may differ according to the date you choose.

Period is thread-safe and immutable, provided that the PeriodType is as well. All standard PeriodType classes supplied are thread-safe and immutable.

Since:
1.0
See Also:
MutablePeriod, Serialized Form

Field Summary
static Period ZERO
          A period of zero length and standard period type.
 
Constructor Summary
Period()
          Creates a new empty period with the standard set of fields.
Period(int hours, int minutes, int seconds, int millis)
          Create a period from a set of field values using the standard set of fields.
Period(int years, int months, int weeks, int days, int hours, int minutes, int seconds, int millis)
          Create a period from a set of field values using the standard set of fields.
Period(int years, int months, int weeks, int days, int hours, int minutes, int seconds, int millis, PeriodType type)
          Create a period from a set of field values.
Period(long duration)
          Creates a period from the given millisecond duration using the standard set of fields.
Period(long duration, Chronology chronology)
          Creates a period from the given millisecond duration using the standard set of fields.
Period(long startInstant, long endInstant)
          Creates a period from the given interval endpoints using the standard set of fields.
Period(long startInstant, long endInstant, Chronology chrono)
          Creates a period from the given interval endpoints using the standard set of fields.
Period(long startInstant, long endInstant, PeriodType type)
          Creates a period from the given interval endpoints.
Period(long startInstant, long endInstant, PeriodType type, Chronology chrono)
          Creates a period from the given interval endpoints.
Period(long duration, PeriodType type)
          Creates a period from the given millisecond duration.
Period(long duration, PeriodType type, Chronology chronology)
          Creates a period from the given millisecond duration.
Period(Object period)
          Creates a period by converting or copying from another object.
Period(Object period, Chronology chrono)
          Creates a period by converting or copying from another object.
Period(Object period, PeriodType type)
          Creates a period by converting or copying from another object.
Period(Object period, PeriodType type, Chronology chrono)
          Creates a period by converting or copying from another object.
Period(ReadableDuration duration, ReadableInstant endInstant)
          Creates a period from the given duration and end point.
Period(ReadableDuration duration, ReadableInstant endInstant, PeriodType type)
          Creates a period from the given duration and end point.
Period(ReadableInstant startInstant, ReadableDuration duration)
          Creates a period from the given start point and the duration.
Period(ReadableInstant startInstant, ReadableDuration duration, PeriodType type)
          Creates a period from the given start point and the duration.
Period(ReadableInstant startInstant, ReadableInstant endInstant)
          Creates a period between the given instants using the standard set of fields.
Period(ReadableInstant startInstant, ReadableInstant endInstant, PeriodType type)
          Creates a period between the given instants.
Period(ReadablePartial start, ReadablePartial end)
          Creates a period from two partially specified times.
Period(ReadablePartial start, ReadablePartial end, PeriodType type)
          Creates a period from two partially specified times.
 
Method Summary
static Period days(int days)
          Create a period with a specified number of days.
static Period fieldDifference(ReadablePartial start, ReadablePartial end)
          Creates a period from two partially specified times, calculating by field difference.
 int getDays()
          Gets the days field part of the period.
 int getHours()
          Gets the hours field part of the period.
 int getMillis()
          Gets the millis field part of the period.
 int getMinutes()
          Gets the minutes field part of the period.
 int getMonths()
          Gets the months field part of the period.
 int getSeconds()
          Gets the seconds field part of the period.
 int getWeeks()
          Gets the weeks field part of the period.
 int getYears()
          Gets the years field part of the period.
static Period hours(int hours)
          Create a period with a specified number of hours.
static Period millis(int millis)
          Create a period with a specified number of millis.
 Period minus(ReadablePeriod period)
          Returns a new period with the specified period subtracted.
 Period minusDays(int days)
          Returns a new period minus the specified number of days taken away.
 Period minusHours(int hours)
          Returns a new period minus the specified number of hours taken away.
 Period minusMillis(int millis)
          Returns a new period minus the specified number of millis taken away.
 Period minusMinutes(int minutes)
          Returns a new period minus the specified number of minutes taken away.
 Period minusMonths(int months)
          Returns a new period minus the specified number of months taken away.
 Period minusSeconds(int seconds)
          Returns a new period minus the specified number of seconds taken away.
 Period minusWeeks(int weeks)
          Returns a new period minus the specified number of weeks taken away.
 Period minusYears(int years)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of years taken away.
static Period minutes(int minutes)
          Create a period with a specified number of minutes.
static Period months(int months)
          Create a period with a specified number of months.
 Period multipliedBy(int scalar)
          Returns a new instance with each element in this period multiplied by the specified scalar.
 Period negated()
          Returns a new instance with each amount in this period negated.
 Period normalizedStandard()
          Normalizes this period using standard rules, assuming a 12 month year, 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.
 Period normalizedStandard(PeriodType type)
          Normalizes this period using standard rules, assuming a 12 month year, 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute, providing control over how the result is split into fields.
static Period parse(String str)
          Parses a Period from the specified string.
static Period parse(String str, PeriodFormatter formatter)
          Parses a Period from the specified string using a formatter.
 Period plus(ReadablePeriod period)
          Returns a new period with the specified period added.
 Period plusDays(int days)
          Returns a new period plus the specified number of days added.
 Period plusHours(int hours)
          Returns a new period plus the specified number of hours added.
 Period plusMillis(int millis)
          Returns a new period plus the specified number of millis added.
 Period plusMinutes(int minutes)
          Returns a new period plus the specified number of minutes added.
 Period plusMonths(int months)
          Returns a new period plus the specified number of months added.
 Period plusSeconds(int seconds)
          Returns a new period plus the specified number of seconds added.
 Period plusWeeks(int weeks)
          Returns a new period plus the specified number of weeks added.
 Period plusYears(int years)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of years added.
static Period seconds(int seconds)
          Create a period with a specified number of seconds.
 Period toPeriod()
          Get this period as an immutable Period object by returning this.
 Days toStandardDays()
          Converts this period to a period in days assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.
 Duration toStandardDuration()
          Converts this period to a duration assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.
 Hours toStandardHours()
          Converts this period to a period in hours assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.
 Minutes toStandardMinutes()
          Converts this period to a period in minutes assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.
 Seconds toStandardSeconds()
          Converts this period to a period in seconds assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.
 Weeks toStandardWeeks()
          Converts this period to a period in weeks assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.
static Period weeks(int weeks)
          Create a period with a specified number of weeks.
 Period withDays(int days)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of days.
 Period withField(DurationFieldType field, int value)
          Creates a new Period instance with the specified field set to a new value.
 Period withFieldAdded(DurationFieldType field, int value)
          Creates a new Period instance with the valueToAdd added to the specified field.
 Period withFields(ReadablePeriod period)
          Creates a new Period instance with the fields from the specified period copied on top of those from this period.
 Period withHours(int hours)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of hours.
 Period withMillis(int millis)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of millis.
 Period withMinutes(int minutes)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of minutes.
 Period withMonths(int months)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of months.
 Period withPeriodType(PeriodType type)
          Creates a new Period instance with the same field values but different PeriodType.
 Period withSeconds(int seconds)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of seconds.
 Period withWeeks(int weeks)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of weeks.
 Period withYears(int years)
          Returns a new period with the specified number of years.
static Period years(int years)
          Create a period with a specified number of years.
 
Methods inherited from class org.joda.time.base.BasePeriod
addField, addFieldInto, addPeriod, addPeriodInto, checkPeriodType, getPeriodType, getValue, mergePeriod, mergePeriodInto, setField, setFieldInto, setPeriod, setPeriod, setValue, setValues, toDurationFrom, toDurationTo
 
Methods inherited from class org.joda.time.base.AbstractPeriod
equals, get, getFieldType, getFieldTypes, getValues, hashCode, indexOf, isSupported, size, toMutablePeriod, toString, toString
 
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, finalize, getClass, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, wait
 
Methods inherited from interface org.joda.time.ReadablePeriod
equals, get, getFieldType, getPeriodType, getValue, hashCode, isSupported, size, toMutablePeriod, toString
 

Field Detail

ZERO

public static final Period ZERO
A period of zero length and standard period type.

Since:
1.4
Constructor Detail

Period

public Period()
Creates a new empty period with the standard set of fields.

One way to initialise a period is as follows:

 Period = new Period().withYears(6).withMonths(3).withSeconds(23);
 
Bear in mind that this creates four period instances in total, three of which are immediately discarded. The alterative is more efficient, but less readable:
 Period = new Period(6, 3, 0, 0, 0, 0, 23, 0);
 
The following is also slightly less wasteful:
 Period = Period.years(6).withMonths(3).withSeconds(23);
 


Period

public Period(int hours,
              int minutes,
              int seconds,
              int millis)
Create a period from a set of field values using the standard set of fields. Note that the parameters specify the time fields hours, minutes, seconds and millis, not the date fields.

Parameters:
hours - amount of hours in this period
minutes - amount of minutes in this period
seconds - amount of seconds in this period
millis - amount of milliseconds in this period

Period

public Period(int years,
              int months,
              int weeks,
              int days,
              int hours,
              int minutes,
              int seconds,
              int millis)
Create a period from a set of field values using the standard set of fields.

Parameters:
years - amount of years in this period
months - amount of months in this period
weeks - amount of weeks in this period
days - amount of days in this period
hours - amount of hours in this period
minutes - amount of minutes in this period
seconds - amount of seconds in this period
millis - amount of milliseconds in this period

Period

public Period(int years,
              int months,
              int weeks,
              int days,
              int hours,
              int minutes,
              int seconds,
              int millis,
              PeriodType type)
Create a period from a set of field values.

There is usually little need to use this constructor. The period type is used primarily to define how to split an interval into a period. As this constructor already is split, the period type does no real work.

Parameters:
years - amount of years in this period, which must be zero if unsupported
months - amount of months in this period, which must be zero if unsupported
weeks - amount of weeks in this period, which must be zero if unsupported
days - amount of days in this period, which must be zero if unsupported
hours - amount of hours in this period, which must be zero if unsupported
minutes - amount of minutes in this period, which must be zero if unsupported
seconds - amount of seconds in this period, which must be zero if unsupported
millis - amount of milliseconds in this period, which must be zero if unsupported
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means AllType
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if an unsupported field's value is non-zero

Period

public Period(long duration)
Creates a period from the given millisecond duration using the standard set of fields.

Only precise fields in the period type will be used. For the standard period type this is the time fields only. Thus the year, month, week and day fields will not be populated.

If the duration is small, less than one day, then this method will perform as you might expect and split the fields evenly.

If the duration is larger than one day then all the remaining duration will be stored in the largest available precise field, hours in this case.

For example, a duration equal to (365 + 60 + 5) days will be converted to ((365 + 60 + 5) * 24) hours by this constructor.

For more control over the conversion process, you have two options:

Parameters:
duration - the duration, in milliseconds

Period

public Period(long duration,
              PeriodType type)
Creates a period from the given millisecond duration.

Only precise fields in the period type will be used. Imprecise fields will not be populated.

If the duration is small then this method will perform as you might expect and split the fields evenly.

If the duration is large then all the remaining duration will be stored in the largest available precise field. For details as to which fields are precise, review the period type javadoc.

Parameters:
duration - the duration, in milliseconds
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means standard

Period

public Period(long duration,
              Chronology chronology)
Creates a period from the given millisecond duration using the standard set of fields.

Only precise fields in the period type will be used. Imprecise fields will not be populated.

If the duration is small then this method will perform as you might expect and split the fields evenly.

If the duration is large then all the remaining duration will be stored in the largest available precise field. For details as to which fields are precise, review the period type javadoc.

Parameters:
duration - the duration, in milliseconds
chronology - the chronology to use to split the duration, null means ISO default

Period

public Period(long duration,
              PeriodType type,
              Chronology chronology)
Creates a period from the given millisecond duration.

Only precise fields in the period type will be used. Imprecise fields will not be populated.

If the duration is small then this method will perform as you might expect and split the fields evenly.

If the duration is large then all the remaining duration will be stored in the largest available precise field. For details as to which fields are precise, review the period type javadoc.

Parameters:
duration - the duration, in milliseconds
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means standard
chronology - the chronology to use to split the duration, null means ISO default

Period

public Period(long startInstant,
              long endInstant)
Creates a period from the given interval endpoints using the standard set of fields.

Parameters:
startInstant - interval start, in milliseconds
endInstant - interval end, in milliseconds

Period

public Period(long startInstant,
              long endInstant,
              PeriodType type)
Creates a period from the given interval endpoints.

Parameters:
startInstant - interval start, in milliseconds
endInstant - interval end, in milliseconds
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means standard

Period

public Period(long startInstant,
              long endInstant,
              Chronology chrono)
Creates a period from the given interval endpoints using the standard set of fields.

Parameters:
startInstant - interval start, in milliseconds
endInstant - interval end, in milliseconds
chrono - the chronology to use, null means ISO in default zone

Period

public Period(long startInstant,
              long endInstant,
              PeriodType type,
              Chronology chrono)
Creates a period from the given interval endpoints.

Parameters:
startInstant - interval start, in milliseconds
endInstant - interval end, in milliseconds
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means standard
chrono - the chronology to use, null means ISO in default zone

Period

public Period(ReadableInstant startInstant,
              ReadableInstant endInstant)
Creates a period between the given instants using the standard set of fields.

Most calculations performed by this method have obvious results. The special case is where the calculation is from a "long" month to a "short" month. Here, the result favours increasing the months field rather than the days. For example, 2013-01-31 to 2013-02-28 is treated as one whole month. By contrast, 2013-01-31 to 2013-03-30 is treated as one month and 30 days (exposed as 4 weeks and 2 days). The results are explained by considering that the start date plus the calculated period result in the end date.

Parameters:
startInstant - interval start, null means now
endInstant - interval end, null means now

Period

public Period(ReadableInstant startInstant,
              ReadableInstant endInstant,
              PeriodType type)
Creates a period between the given instants.

Most calculations performed by this method have obvious results. The special case is where the calculation is from a "long" month to a "short" month. Here, the result favours increasing the months field rather than the days. For example, 2013-01-31 to 2013-02-28 is treated as one whole month. By contrast, 2013-01-31 to 2013-03-30 is treated as one month and 30 days. The results are explained by considering that the start date plus the calculated period result in the end date.

Parameters:
startInstant - interval start, null means now
endInstant - interval end, null means now
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means standard

Period

public Period(ReadablePartial start,
              ReadablePartial end)
Creates a period from two partially specified times.

The two partials must contain the same fields, thus you can specify two LocalDate objects, or two LocalTime objects, but not one of each. As these are Partial objects, time zones have no effect on the result.

The two partials must also both be contiguous - see DateTimeUtils.isContiguous(ReadablePartial) for a definition. Both LocalDate and LocalTime are contiguous.

Most calculations performed by this method have obvious results. The special case is where the calculation is from a "long" month to a "short" month. Here, the result favours increasing the months field rather than the days. For example, 2013-01-31 to 2013-02-28 is treated as one whole month. By contrast, 2013-01-31 to 2013-03-30 is treated as one month and 30 days (exposed as 4 weeks and 2 days). The results are explained by considering that the start date plus the calculated period result in the end date.

An alternative way of constructing a Period from two Partials is fieldDifference(ReadablePartial, ReadablePartial). That method handles all kinds of partials.

Parameters:
start - the start of the period, must not be null
end - the end of the period, must not be null
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if the partials are null or invalid
Since:
1.1

Period

public Period(ReadablePartial start,
              ReadablePartial end,
              PeriodType type)
Creates a period from two partially specified times.

The two partials must contain the same fields, thus you can specify two LocalDate objects, or two LocalTime objects, but not one of each. As these are Partial objects, time zones have no effect on the result.

The two partials must also both be contiguous - see DateTimeUtils.isContiguous(ReadablePartial) for a definition. Both LocalDate and LocalTime are contiguous.

Most calculations performed by this method have obvious results. The special case is where the calculation is from a "long" month to a "short" month. Here, the result favours increasing the months field rather than the days. For example, 2013-01-31 to 2013-02-28 is treated as one whole month. By contrast, 2013-01-31 to 2013-03-30 is treated as one month and 30 days. The results are explained by considering that the start date plus the calculated period result in the end date.

An alternative way of constructing a Period from two Partials is fieldDifference(ReadablePartial, ReadablePartial). That method handles all kinds of partials.

Parameters:
start - the start of the period, must not be null
end - the end of the period, must not be null
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means standard
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if the partials are null or invalid
Since:
1.1

Period

public Period(ReadableInstant startInstant,
              ReadableDuration duration)
Creates a period from the given start point and the duration.

Parameters:
startInstant - the interval start, null means now
duration - the duration of the interval, null means zero-length

Period

public Period(ReadableInstant startInstant,
              ReadableDuration duration,
              PeriodType type)
Creates a period from the given start point and the duration.

Parameters:
startInstant - the interval start, null means now
duration - the duration of the interval, null means zero-length
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means standard

Period

public Period(ReadableDuration duration,
              ReadableInstant endInstant)
Creates a period from the given duration and end point.

Parameters:
duration - the duration of the interval, null means zero-length
endInstant - the interval end, null means now

Period

public Period(ReadableDuration duration,
              ReadableInstant endInstant,
              PeriodType type)
Creates a period from the given duration and end point.

Parameters:
duration - the duration of the interval, null means zero-length
endInstant - the interval end, null means now
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means standard

Period

public Period(Object period)
Creates a period by converting or copying from another object.

The recognised object types are defined in ConverterManager and include ReadablePeriod, ReadableInterval and String. The String formats are described by ISOPeriodFormat.standard().

Parameters:
period - period to convert
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if period is invalid
UnsupportedOperationException - if an unsupported field's value is non-zero

Period

public Period(Object period,
              PeriodType type)
Creates a period by converting or copying from another object.

The recognised object types are defined in ConverterManager and include ReadablePeriod, ReadableInterval and String. The String formats are described by ISOPeriodFormat.standard().

Parameters:
period - period to convert
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means use converter
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if period is invalid
UnsupportedOperationException - if an unsupported field's value is non-zero

Period

public Period(Object period,
              Chronology chrono)
Creates a period by converting or copying from another object.

The recognised object types are defined in ConverterManager and include ReadablePeriod, ReadableInterval and String. The String formats are described by ISOPeriodFormat.standard().

Parameters:
period - period to convert
chrono - the chronology to use, null means ISO in default zone
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if period is invalid
UnsupportedOperationException - if an unsupported field's value is non-zero

Period

public Period(Object period,
              PeriodType type,
              Chronology chrono)
Creates a period by converting or copying from another object.

The recognised object types are defined in ConverterManager and include ReadablePeriod, ReadableInterval and String. The String formats are described by ISOPeriodFormat.standard().

Parameters:
period - period to convert
type - which set of fields this period supports, null means use converter
chrono - the chronology to use, null means ISO in default zone
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if period is invalid
UnsupportedOperationException - if an unsupported field's value is non-zero
Method Detail

parse

public static Period parse(String str)
Parses a Period from the specified string.

This uses ISOPeriodFormat.standard().

Parameters:
str - the string to parse, not null
Since:
2.0

parse

public static Period parse(String str,
                           PeriodFormatter formatter)
Parses a Period from the specified string using a formatter.

Parameters:
str - the string to parse, not null
formatter - the formatter to use, not null
Since:
2.0

years

public static Period years(int years)
Create a period with a specified number of years.

The standard period type is used, thus you can add other fields such as months or days using the withXxx() methods. For example, Period.years(2).withMonths(6);

If you want a year-based period that cannot have other fields added, then you should consider using Years.

Parameters:
years - the amount of years in this period
Returns:
the period

months

public static Period months(int months)
Create a period with a specified number of months.

The standard period type is used, thus you can add other fields such as years or days using the withXxx() methods. For example, Period.months(2).withDays(6);

If you want a month-based period that cannot have other fields added, then you should consider using Months.

Parameters:
months - the amount of months in this period
Returns:
the period

weeks

public static Period weeks(int weeks)
Create a period with a specified number of weeks.

The standard period type is used, thus you can add other fields such as months or days using the withXxx() methods. For example, Period.weeks(2).withDays(6);

If you want a week-based period that cannot have other fields added, then you should consider using Weeks.

Parameters:
weeks - the amount of weeks in this period
Returns:
the period

days

public static Period days(int days)
Create a period with a specified number of days.

The standard period type is used, thus you can add other fields such as months or weeks using the withXxx() methods. For example, Period.days(2).withHours(6);

If you want a day-based period that cannot have other fields added, then you should consider using Days.

Parameters:
days - the amount of days in this period
Returns:
the period

hours

public static Period hours(int hours)
Create a period with a specified number of hours.

The standard period type is used, thus you can add other fields such as months or days using the withXxx() methods. For example, Period.hours(2).withMinutes(30);

If you want a hour-based period that cannot have other fields added, then you should consider using Hours.

Parameters:
hours - the amount of hours in this period
Returns:
the period

minutes

public static Period minutes(int minutes)
Create a period with a specified number of minutes.

The standard period type is used, thus you can add other fields such as days or hours using the withXxx() methods. For example, Period.minutes(2).withSeconds(30);

If you want a minute-based period that cannot have other fields added, then you should consider using Minutes.

Parameters:
minutes - the amount of minutes in this period
Returns:
the period

seconds

public static Period seconds(int seconds)
Create a period with a specified number of seconds.

The standard period type is used, thus you can add other fields such as days or hours using the withXxx() methods. For example, Period.seconds(2).withMillis(30);

If you want a second-based period that cannot have other fields added, then you should consider using Seconds.

Parameters:
seconds - the amount of seconds in this period
Returns:
the period

millis

public static Period millis(int millis)
Create a period with a specified number of millis.

The standard period type is used, thus you can add other fields such as days or hours using the withXxx() methods. For example, Period.millis(20).withSeconds(30);

Parameters:
millis - the amount of millis in this period
Returns:
the period

fieldDifference

public static Period fieldDifference(ReadablePartial start,
                                     ReadablePartial end)
Creates a period from two partially specified times, calculating by field difference.

The two partials must contain the same fields, thus you can specify two LocalDate objects, or two LocalTime objects, but not one of each. Also, the partial may not contain overlapping fields, such as dayOfWeek and dayOfMonth.

Calculation by field difference works by extracting the difference one field at a time and not wrapping into other fields. Thus 2005-06-09/2007-04-12 will yield P1Y-2M3D.

For example, you have an event that always runs from the 27th of each month to the 2nd of the next month. If you calculate this period using a standard constructor, then you will get between P3D and P6D depending on the month. If you use this method, then you will get P1M-25D. This field-difference based period can be successfully applied to each month of the year to obtain the correct end date for a given start date.

Parameters:
start - the start of the period, must not be null
end - the end of the period, must not be null
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if the partials are null or invalid
Since:
1.1

toPeriod

public Period toPeriod()
Get this period as an immutable Period object by returning this.

Specified by:
toPeriod in interface ReadablePeriod
Overrides:
toPeriod in class AbstractPeriod
Returns:
this

getYears

public int getYears()
Gets the years field part of the period.

Returns:
the number of years in the period, zero if unsupported

getMonths

public int getMonths()
Gets the months field part of the period.

Returns:
the number of months in the period, zero if unsupported

getWeeks

public int getWeeks()
Gets the weeks field part of the period.

Returns:
the number of weeks in the period, zero if unsupported

getDays

public int getDays()
Gets the days field part of the period.

Returns:
the number of days in the period, zero if unsupported

getHours

public int getHours()
Gets the hours field part of the period.

Returns:
the number of hours in the period, zero if unsupported

getMinutes

public int getMinutes()
Gets the minutes field part of the period.

Returns:
the number of minutes in the period, zero if unsupported

getSeconds

public int getSeconds()
Gets the seconds field part of the period.

Returns:
the number of seconds in the period, zero if unsupported

getMillis

public int getMillis()
Gets the millis field part of the period.

Returns:
the number of millis in the period, zero if unsupported

withPeriodType

public Period withPeriodType(PeriodType type)
Creates a new Period instance with the same field values but different PeriodType.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
type - the period type to use, null means standard
Returns:
the new period instance
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if the new period won't accept all of the current fields

withFields

public Period withFields(ReadablePeriod period)
Creates a new Period instance with the fields from the specified period copied on top of those from this period.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
period - the period to copy from, null ignored
Returns:
the new period instance
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if a field type is unsupported

withField

public Period withField(DurationFieldType field,
                        int value)
Creates a new Period instance with the specified field set to a new value.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
field - the field to set, not null
value - the value to set to
Returns:
the new period instance
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if the field type is null or unsupported

withFieldAdded

public Period withFieldAdded(DurationFieldType field,
                             int value)
Creates a new Period instance with the valueToAdd added to the specified field.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
field - the field to set, not null
value - the value to add
Returns:
the new period instance
Throws:
IllegalArgumentException - if the field type is null or unsupported

withYears

public Period withYears(int years)
Returns a new period with the specified number of years.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
years - the amount of years to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased years
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

withMonths

public Period withMonths(int months)
Returns a new period with the specified number of months.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
months - the amount of months to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased months
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

withWeeks

public Period withWeeks(int weeks)
Returns a new period with the specified number of weeks.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
weeks - the amount of weeks to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased weeks
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

withDays

public Period withDays(int days)
Returns a new period with the specified number of days.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
days - the amount of days to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased days
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

withHours

public Period withHours(int hours)
Returns a new period with the specified number of hours.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
hours - the amount of hours to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased hours
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

withMinutes

public Period withMinutes(int minutes)
Returns a new period with the specified number of minutes.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
minutes - the amount of minutes to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased minutes
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

withSeconds

public Period withSeconds(int seconds)
Returns a new period with the specified number of seconds.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
seconds - the amount of seconds to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased seconds
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

withMillis

public Period withMillis(int millis)
Returns a new period with the specified number of millis.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
millis - the amount of millis to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased millis
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

plus

public Period plus(ReadablePeriod period)
Returns a new period with the specified period added.

Each field of the period is added separately. Thus a period of 2 hours 30 minutes plus 3 hours 40 minutes will produce a result of 5 hours 70 minutes - see normalizedStandard().

If the period being added contains a non-zero amount for a field that is not supported in this period then an exception is thrown.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
period - the period to add, null adds zero and returns this
Returns:
the new updated period
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if any field is not supported
Since:
1.5

plusYears

public Period plusYears(int years)
Returns a new period with the specified number of years added.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
years - the amount of years to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased years
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

plusMonths

public Period plusMonths(int months)
Returns a new period plus the specified number of months added.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
months - the amount of months to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period plus the increased months
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

plusWeeks

public Period plusWeeks(int weeks)
Returns a new period plus the specified number of weeks added.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
weeks - the amount of weeks to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period plus the increased weeks
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

plusDays

public Period plusDays(int days)
Returns a new period plus the specified number of days added.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
days - the amount of days to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period plus the increased days
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

plusHours

public Period plusHours(int hours)
Returns a new period plus the specified number of hours added.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
hours - the amount of hours to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period plus the increased hours
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

plusMinutes

public Period plusMinutes(int minutes)
Returns a new period plus the specified number of minutes added.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
minutes - the amount of minutes to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period plus the increased minutes
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

plusSeconds

public Period plusSeconds(int seconds)
Returns a new period plus the specified number of seconds added.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
seconds - the amount of seconds to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period plus the increased seconds
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

plusMillis

public Period plusMillis(int millis)
Returns a new period plus the specified number of millis added.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
millis - the amount of millis to add, may be negative
Returns:
the new period plus the increased millis
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

minus

public Period minus(ReadablePeriod period)
Returns a new period with the specified period subtracted.

Each field of the period is subtracted separately. Thus a period of 3 hours 30 minutes minus 2 hours 40 minutes will produce a result of 1 hour and -10 minutes - see normalizedStandard().

If the period being added contains a non-zero amount for a field that is not supported in this period then an exception is thrown.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
period - the period to add, null adds zero and returns this
Returns:
the new updated period
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if any field is not supported
Since:
1.5

minusYears

public Period minusYears(int years)
Returns a new period with the specified number of years taken away.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
years - the amount of years to take away, may be negative
Returns:
the new period with the increased years
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

minusMonths

public Period minusMonths(int months)
Returns a new period minus the specified number of months taken away.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
months - the amount of months to take away, may be negative
Returns:
the new period minus the increased months
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

minusWeeks

public Period minusWeeks(int weeks)
Returns a new period minus the specified number of weeks taken away.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
weeks - the amount of weeks to take away, may be negative
Returns:
the new period minus the increased weeks
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

minusDays

public Period minusDays(int days)
Returns a new period minus the specified number of days taken away.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
days - the amount of days to take away, may be negative
Returns:
the new period minus the increased days
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

minusHours

public Period minusHours(int hours)
Returns a new period minus the specified number of hours taken away.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
hours - the amount of hours to take away, may be negative
Returns:
the new period minus the increased hours
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

minusMinutes

public Period minusMinutes(int minutes)
Returns a new period minus the specified number of minutes taken away.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
minutes - the amount of minutes to take away, may be negative
Returns:
the new period minus the increased minutes
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

minusSeconds

public Period minusSeconds(int seconds)
Returns a new period minus the specified number of seconds taken away.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
seconds - the amount of seconds to take away, may be negative
Returns:
the new period minus the increased seconds
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

minusMillis

public Period minusMillis(int millis)
Returns a new period minus the specified number of millis taken away.

This period instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Parameters:
millis - the amount of millis to take away, may be negative
Returns:
the new period minus the increased millis
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the field is not supported

multipliedBy

public Period multipliedBy(int scalar)
Returns a new instance with each element in this period multiplied by the specified scalar.

Parameters:
scalar - the scalar to multiply by, not null
Returns:
a Period based on this period with the amounts multiplied by the scalar, never null
Throws:
ArithmeticException - if the capacity of any field is exceeded
Since:
2.1

negated

public Period negated()
Returns a new instance with each amount in this period negated.

Returns:
a Period based on this period with the amounts negated, never null
Throws:
ArithmeticException - if any field has the minimum value
Since:
2.1

toStandardWeeks

public Weeks toStandardWeeks()
Converts this period to a period in weeks assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.

This method allows you to convert between different types of period. However to achieve this it makes the assumption that all weeks are 7 days, all days are 24 hours, all hours are 60 minutes and all minutes are 60 seconds. This is not true when daylight savings time is considered, and may also not be true for some unusual chronologies. However, it is included as it is a useful operation for many applications and business rules.

If the period contains years or months, an exception will be thrown.

Returns:
a period representing the number of standard weeks in this period
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the period contains years or months
ArithmeticException - if the number of weeks is too large to be represented
Since:
1.5

toStandardDays

public Days toStandardDays()
Converts this period to a period in days assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.

This method allows you to convert between different types of period. However to achieve this it makes the assumption that all weeks are 7 days, all days are 24 hours, all hours are 60 minutes and all minutes are 60 seconds. This is not true when daylight savings time is considered, and may also not be true for some unusual chronologies. However, it is included as it is a useful operation for many applications and business rules.

If the period contains years or months, an exception will be thrown.

Returns:
a period representing the number of standard days in this period
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the period contains years or months
ArithmeticException - if the number of days is too large to be represented
Since:
1.5

toStandardHours

public Hours toStandardHours()
Converts this period to a period in hours assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.

This method allows you to convert between different types of period. However to achieve this it makes the assumption that all weeks are 7 days, all days are 24 hours, all hours are 60 minutes and all minutes are 60 seconds. This is not true when daylight savings time is considered, and may also not be true for some unusual chronologies. However, it is included as it is a useful operation for many applications and business rules.

If the period contains years or months, an exception will be thrown.

Returns:
a period representing the number of standard hours in this period
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the period contains years or months
ArithmeticException - if the number of hours is too large to be represented
Since:
1.5

toStandardMinutes

public Minutes toStandardMinutes()
Converts this period to a period in minutes assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.

This method allows you to convert between different types of period. However to achieve this it makes the assumption that all weeks are 7 days, all days are 24 hours, all hours are 60 minutes and all minutes are 60 seconds. This is not true when daylight savings time is considered, and may also not be true for some unusual chronologies. However, it is included as it is a useful operation for many applications and business rules.

If the period contains years or months, an exception will be thrown.

Returns:
a period representing the number of standard minutes in this period
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the period contains years or months
ArithmeticException - if the number of minutes is too large to be represented
Since:
1.5

toStandardSeconds

public Seconds toStandardSeconds()
Converts this period to a period in seconds assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.

This method allows you to convert between different types of period. However to achieve this it makes the assumption that all weeks are 7 days, all days are 24 hours, all hours are 60 minutes and all minutes are 60 seconds. This is not true when daylight savings time is considered, and may also not be true for some unusual chronologies. However, it is included as it is a useful operation for many applications and business rules.

If the period contains years or months, an exception will be thrown.

Returns:
a period representing the number of standard seconds in this period
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the period contains years or months
ArithmeticException - if the number of seconds is too large to be represented
Since:
1.5

toStandardDuration

public Duration toStandardDuration()
Converts this period to a duration assuming a 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.

This method allows you to convert from a period to a duration. However to achieve this it makes the assumption that all weeks are 7 days, all days are 24 hours, all hours are 60 minutes and all minutes are 60 seconds. This is not true when daylight savings time is considered, and may also not be true for some unusual chronologies. However, it is included as it is a useful operation for many applications and business rules.

If the period contains years or months, an exception will be thrown.

Returns:
a duration equivalent to this period
Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException - if the period contains years or months
Since:
1.5

normalizedStandard

public Period normalizedStandard()
Normalizes this period using standard rules, assuming a 12 month year, 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute.

This method allows you to normalize a period. However to achieve this it makes the assumption that all years are 12 months, all weeks are 7 days, all days are 24 hours, all hours are 60 minutes and all minutes are 60 seconds. This is not true when daylight savings time is considered, and may also not be true for some chronologies. However, it is included as it is a useful operation for many applications and business rules.

If the period contains years or months, then the months will be normalized to be between 0 and 11. The days field and below will be normalized as necessary, however this will not overflow into the months field. Thus a period of 1 year 15 months will normalize to 2 years 3 months. But a period of 1 month 40 days will remain as 1 month 40 days.

The result will always have a PeriodType of standard, thus days will be grouped into weeks.

Returns:
a normalized period equivalent to this period
Throws:
ArithmeticException - if any field is too large to be represented
Since:
1.5

normalizedStandard

public Period normalizedStandard(PeriodType type)
Normalizes this period using standard rules, assuming a 12 month year, 7 day week, 24 hour day, 60 minute hour and 60 second minute, providing control over how the result is split into fields.

This method allows you to normalize a period. However to achieve this it makes the assumption that all years are 12 months, all weeks are 7 days, all days are 24 hours, all hours are 60 minutes and all minutes are 60 seconds. This is not true when daylight savings time is considered, and may also not be true for some chronologies. However, it is included as it is a useful operation for many applications and business rules.

If the period contains years or months, then the months will be normalized to be between 0 and 11. The days field and below will be normalized as necessary, however this will not overflow into the months field. Thus a period of 1 year 15 months will normalize to 2 years 3 months. But a period of 1 month 40 days will remain as 1 month 40 days.

The PeriodType parameter controls how the result is created. It allows you to omit certain fields from the result if desired. For example, you may not want the result to include weeks, in which case you pass in PeriodType.yearMonthDayTime().

Parameters:
type - the period type of the new period, null means standard type
Returns:
a normalized period equivalent to this period
Throws:
ArithmeticException - if any field is too large to be represented
UnsupportedOperationException - if this period contains non-zero years or months but the specified period type does not support them
Since:
1.5


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