Annotation Interface DateTimeFormat
Supports formatting by style pattern, ISO date time pattern, or custom format pattern string.
 Can be applied to Date, Calendar, Long (for
 millisecond timestamps) as well as JSR-310 java.time value types.
 
For style-based formatting, set the style() attribute to the desired style pattern code.
 The first character of the code is the date style, and the second character is the time style.
 Specify a character of 'S' for short style, 'M' for medium, 'L' for long, and 'F' for full.
 The date or time may be omitted by specifying the style character '-' — for example,
 'M-' specifies a medium format for the date with no time.
 
For ISO-based formatting, set the iso() attribute to the desired DateTimeFormat.ISO format,
 such as DateTimeFormat.ISO.DATE.
 
For custom formatting, set the pattern() attribute to a date time pattern, such as
 "yyyy/MM/dd hh:mm:ss a".
 
Each attribute is mutually exclusive, so only set one attribute per annotation instance (the one most convenient for your formatting needs).
- When the pattern attribute is specified, it takes precedence over both the style and ISO attribute.
- When the iso()attribute is specified, it takes precedence over the style attribute.
- When no annotation attributes are specified, the default format applied is style-based with a style code of 'SS' (short date, short time).
Time Zones
Whenever the style() or pattern() attribute is used, the
 default time zone of the JVM will
 be used when formatting Date values. Whenever the iso()
 attribute is used when formatting Date values, UTC
 will be used as the time zone. The same time zone will be applied to any
 fallback patterns as well. In order to enforce
 consistent use of UTC as the time zone, you can bootstrap the JVM with
 -Duser.timezone=UTC.
- Since:
- 3.0
- Author:
- Keith Donald, Juergen Hoeller, Sam Brannen
- See Also:
- 
Nested Class SummaryNested ClassesModifier and TypeClassDescriptionstatic enumCommon ISO date time format patterns.
- 
Optional Element SummaryOptional ElementsModifier and TypeOptional ElementDescriptionString[]The ISO pattern to use to format the field or method parameter.The custom pattern to use to format the field or method parameter.The style pattern to use to format the field or method parameter.
- 
Element Details- 
styleString styleThe style pattern to use to format the field or method parameter.Defaults to 'SS' for short date, short time. Set this attribute when you wish to format your field or method parameter in accordance with a common style other than the default style. - See Also:
 - Default:
- "SS"
 
- 
isoThe ISO pattern to use to format the field or method parameter.Supported ISO patterns are defined in the DateTimeFormat.ISOenum.Defaults to DateTimeFormat.ISO.NONE, indicating this attribute should be ignored. Set this attribute when you wish to format your field or method parameter in accordance with an ISO format.- See Also:
 - Default:
- NONE
 
- 
patternString patternThe custom pattern to use to format the field or method parameter.Defaults to empty String, indicating no custom pattern String has been specified. Set this attribute when you wish to format your field or method parameter in accordance with a custom date time pattern not represented by a style or ISO format. Note: This pattern follows the original SimpleDateFormatstyle, as also supported by Joda-Time, with strict parsing semantics towards overflows (e.g. rejecting a Feb 29 value for a non-leap-year). As a consequence, 'yy' characters indicate a year in the traditional style, not a "year-of-era" as in theDateTimeFormatterspecification (i.e. 'yy' turns into 'uu' when going through aDateTimeFormatterwith strict resolution mode).- See Also:
 - Default:
- ""
 
- 
fallbackPatternsString[] fallbackPatternsThe set of custom patterns to use as a fallback in case parsing fails for the primarypattern(),iso(), orstyle()attribute.For example, if you wish to use the ISO date format for parsing and printing but allow for lenient parsing of user input for various date formats, you could configure something similar to the following. @DateTimeFormat(iso = ISO.DATE, fallbackPatterns = { "M/d/yy", "dd.MM.yyyy" })Fallback patterns are only used for parsing. They are not used for printing the value as a String. The primary pattern(),iso(), orstyle()attribute is always used for printing. For details on which time zone is used for fallback patterns, see the class-level documentation.Fallback patterns are not supported for Joda-Time value types. - Since:
- 5.3.5
 - Default:
- {}
 
 
-