The reason it does this is because when looking at a date represented by a week, it only looks at the first day in the week. You'd need to manually check first and last days of the week and, if they are in a different month, then format the date manually. You also need to be careful about the week overlapping the years as well. Something like this:
Calendar wek = Calendar.getInstance(Locale.US);
wek.add(Calendar.WEEK_OF_YEAR,r);
//this will set your calendar onto the first day of the week
int w = wek.get(Calendar.WEEK_OF_YEAR);
int y = wek.get(Calendar.YEAR);
wek.clear();
wek.set(Calendar.YEAR, y);
wek.set(Calendar.WEEK_OF_YEAR, w);
//get the month and year of the first day of the week
int m1 = wek1.get(Calendar.MONTH);
int y1 = wek1.get(Calendar.YEAR);
//get the date for the end of the week and its month and year
Calendar w2 = wek;
w2.add(Calendar.DATE, 6);
int m2 = w2.get(Calendar.MONTH);
int y2 = w2.get(Calendar.YEAR);
if(m1 == m2) {
//if the two months are the same, then just format the date
SimpleDateFormat gm = new SimpleDateFormat("MMM yyyy");
mes.setText(gm.format(wek.getTime()));
}
else if(y1 == y1) {
//different months, same year - format as "MMM - MMM yyyy"
SimpleDateFormat gm = new SimpleDateFormat("MMM");
SimpleDateFormat gy = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy");
mes.setTextText(gm.format(wek.getTime()) + " - " +
gm.format(w2.getTime()) + " " +
gy.format(wek.getTime()));
}
else {
//Different months and different years - format as "MMM yyyy - MMM yyyy"
SimpleDateFormat gm = new SimpleDateFormat("MMM yyyy");
mes.setTextText(gm.format(wek.getTime()) + " - " +
gm.format(w2.getTime()));
}