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I need the start date and the end date of the current month in Java. When the JSP page is loaded with the current month it should automatically calculate the start and end date of that month. It should be irrespective of the year and month. That is some month has 31 days or 30 days or 28 days. This should satisfy for a leap year too. Can you help me out with that?

For example if I select month May in a list box I need starting date that is 1 and end date that is 31.

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4 Answers

up vote 11 down vote accepted

There you go:

public Pair<Date, Date> getDateRange() {
    Date begining, end;

    {
        Calendar calendar = getCalendarForNow();
        calendar.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH,
                calendar.getActualMinimum(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH));
        setTimeToBeginningOfDay(calendar);
        begining = calendar.getTime();
    }

    {
        Calendar calendar = getCalendarForNow();
        calendar.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH,
                calendar.getActualMaximum(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH));
        setTimeToEndofDay(calendar);
        end = calendar.getTime();
    }

    return Pair.of(begining, end);
}

private static Calendar getCalendarForNow() {
    Calendar calendar = GregorianCalendar.getInstance();
    calendar.setTime(new Date());
    return calendar;
}

private static void setTimeToBeginningOfDay(Calendar calendar) {
    calendar.set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, 0);
    calendar.set(Calendar.MINUTE, 0);
    calendar.set(Calendar.SECOND, 0);
    calendar.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0);
}

private static void setTimeToEndofDay(Calendar calendar) {
    calendar.set(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY, 23);
    calendar.set(Calendar.MINUTE, 59);
    calendar.set(Calendar.SECOND, 59);
    calendar.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 999);
}

PS: Pair class is simply a pair of two values.

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This is good, but Pair is a terrible abstraction for a date range. Creating a real entity called DateRange would be much better as it would give you a place to add logic. – Javid Jamae Apr 20 '11 at 17:59
I agree. I wrote this just as an example. – Abhinav Sarkar Apr 21 '11 at 20:03

If you have the option, you'd better avoid the horrid Java Date API, and use instead Jodatime. For example:

LocalDate monthBegin = new LocalDate().withDayOfMonth(1);
LocalDate monthEnd = new LocalDate().plusMonths(1).withDayOfMonth(1).minusDay(1);
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Date begining, ending;
Calendar calendar_start =BusinessUnitUtility.getCalendarForNow();
  calendar_start.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH,calendar_start.getActualMinimum(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH));
  begining = calendar_start.getTime();
  String start= DateDifference.dateToString(begining,"dd-MMM-yyyy");//sdf.format(begining);


   //            for End Date of month
  Calendar calendar_end = BusinessUnitUtility.getCalendarForNow();
  calendar_end.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH,calendar_end.getActualMaximum(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH));
      ending = calendar_end.getTime();
      String end=DateDifference.dateToString(ending,"dd-MMM-yyyy");//or sdf.format(end);

enter code here



public static Calendar getCalendarForNow() {
        Calendar calendar = GregorianCalendar.getInstance();
        calendar.setTime(new Date());
        return calendar;
    }
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this code will be help to getting Start Date and Ending date of the Current month – paks Apr 6 '11 at 10:09

With the date4j library :

dt.getStartOfMonth();
dt.getEndOfMonth();
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