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/*

This is not an official specification document, and usage is restricted.

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(c) 2005-2007 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Neither this file nor any files generated from it describe a complete specification, and they may only be used as described below. For example, no permission is given for you to incorporate this file, in whole or in part, in an implementation of a Java specification.

Sun Microsystems Inc. owns the copyright in this file and it is provided to you for informative, as opposed to normative, use. The file and any files generated from it may be used to generate other informative documentation, such as a unified set of documents of API signatures for a platform that includes technologies expressed as Java APIs. The file may also be used to produce "compilation stubs," which allow applications to be compiled and validated for such platforms.

Any work generated from this file, such as unified javadocs or compiled stub files, must be accompanied by this notice in its entirety.

This work corresponds to the API signatures of JSR 219: Foundation Profile 1.1. In the event of a discrepency between this work and the JSR 219 specification, which is available at http://www.jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=219, the latter takes precedence. */ package java.util; import java.io.Serializable; import java.lang.ref.SoftReference; import java.security.AccessController; import java.security.PrivilegedAction; import java.text.SimpleDateFormat; /** * TimeZone represents a time zone offset, and also figures out daylight * savings. * *

* Typically, you get a TimeZone using getDefault * which creates a TimeZone based on the time zone where the program * is running. For example, for a program running in Japan, getDefault * creates a TimeZone object based on Japanese Standard Time. * *

* You can also get a TimeZone using getTimeZone * along with a time zone ID. For instance, the time zone ID for the * U.S. Pacific Time zone is "America/Los_Angeles". So, you can get a * U.S. Pacific Time TimeZone object with: *

 * TimeZone tz = TimeZone.getTimeZone("America/Los_Angeles");
 * 
* You can use the getAvailableIDs method to iterate through * all the supported time zone IDs. You can then choose a * supported ID to get a TimeZone. * If the time zone you want is not represented by one of the * supported IDs, then a custom time zone ID can be specified to * produce a TimeZone. The syntax of a custom time zone ID is: * *
 * CustomID:
 *         GMT Sign Hours : Minutes
 *         GMT Sign Hours Minutes
 *         GMT Sign Hours
 * Sign: one of
 *         + -
 * Hours:
 *         Digit
 *         Digit Digit
 * Minutes:
 *         Digit Digit
 * Digit: one of
 *         0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
 * 
* * Hours must be between 0 to 23 and Minutes must be * between 00 to 59. For example, "GMT+10" and "GMT+0010" mean ten * hours and ten minutes ahead of GMT, respectively. *

* The format is locale independent and digits must be taken from the * Basic Latin block of the Unicode standard. No daylight saving time * transition schedule can be specified with a custom time zone ID. If * the specified string doesn't match the syntax, "GMT" * is used. *

* When creating a TimeZone, the specified custom time * zone ID is normalized in the following syntax: *

 * NormalizedCustomID:
 *         GMT Sign TwoDigitHours : Minutes
 * Sign: one of
 *         + -
 * TwoDigitHours:
 *         Digit Digit
 * Minutes:
 *         Digit Digit
 * Digit: one of
 *         0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
 * 
* For example, TimeZone.getTimeZone("GMT-8").getID() returns "GMT-08:00". * *

Three-letter time zone IDs

* * For compatibility with JDK 1.1.x, some other three-letter time zone IDs * (such as "PST", "CTT", "AST") are also supported. However, their * use is deprecated because the same abbreviation is often used * for multiple time zones (for example, "CST" could be U.S. "Central Standard * Time" and "China Standard Time"), and the Java platform can then only * recognize one of them. * * * @see Calendar * @see GregorianCalendar * @see SimpleTimeZone * @version 1.58, 10/25/05 * @author Mark Davis, David Goldsmith, Chen-Lieh Huang, Alan Liu * @since JDK1.1 */ public abstract class TimeZone implements Serializable, Cloneable { /** * A style specifier for getDisplayName() indicating * a short name, such as "PST." * @see #LONG * @since 1.2 */ public static final int SHORT = 0; /** * A style specifier for getDisplayName() indicating * a long name, such as "Pacific Standard Time." * @see #SHORT * @since 1.2 */ public static final int LONG = 1; /** * The string identifier of this TimeZone. This is a * programmatic identifier used internally to look up TimeZone * objects from the system table and also to map them to their localized * display names. ID values are unique in the system * table but may not be for dynamically created zones. * @serial */ private String ID; static final long serialVersionUID = 3581463369166924961L; /** * Sole constructor. (For invocation by subclass constructors, typically * implicit.) */ public TimeZone() { } /** * Gets the time zone offset, for current date, modified in case of * daylight savings. This is the offset to add to UTC to get local time. *

* This method returns a historically correct offset if an * underlying TimeZone implementation subclass * supports historical Daylight Saving Time schedule and GMT * offset changes. * * @param era the era of the given date. * @param year the year in the given date. * @param month the month in the given date. * Month is 0-based. e.g., 0 for January. * @param day the day-in-month of the given date. * @param dayOfWeek the day-of-week of the given date. * @param milliseconds the milliseconds in day in standard * local time. * * @return the offset in milliseconds to add to GMT to get local time. * * @see Calendar#ZONE_OFFSET * @see Calendar#DST_OFFSET */ public abstract int getOffset(int era, int year, int month, int day, int dayOfWeek, int milliseconds); /** * Returns the offset of this time zone from UTC at the specified * date. If Daylight Saving Time is in effect at the specified * date, the offset value is adjusted with the amount of daylight * saving. *

* This method returns a historically correct offset value if an * underlying TimeZone implementation subclass supports historical * Daylight Saving Time schedule and GMT offset changes. * * @param date the date represented in milliseconds since January 1, 1970 00:00:00 GMT * @return the amount of time in milliseconds to add to UTC to get local time. * * @see Calendar#ZONE_OFFSET * @see Calendar#DST_OFFSET * @since 1.4 */ public int getOffset(long date) { return 0; } /** * Sets the base time zone offset to GMT. * This is the offset to add to UTC to get local time. *

* If an underlying TimeZone implementation subclass * supports historical GMT offset changes, the specified GMT * offset is set as the latest GMT offset and the difference from * the known latest GMT offset value is used to adjust all * historical GMT offset values. * * @param offsetMillis the given base time zone offset to GMT. */ public abstract void setRawOffset(int offsetMillis); /** * Returns the amount of time in milliseconds to add to UTC to get * standard time in this time zone. Because this value is not * affected by daylight saving time, it is called raw * offset. *

* If an underlying TimeZone implementation subclass * supports historical GMT offset changes, the method returns the * raw offset value of the current date. In Honolulu, for example, * its raw offset changed from GMT-10:30 to GMT-10:00 in 1947, and * this method always returns -36000000 milliseconds (i.e., -10 * hours). * * @return the amount of raw offset time in milliseconds to add to UTC. * @see Calendar#ZONE_OFFSET */ public abstract int getRawOffset(); /** * Gets the ID of this time zone. * @return the ID of this time zone. */ public String getID() { return null; } /** * Sets the time zone ID. This does not change any other data in * the time zone object. * @param ID the new time zone ID. */ public void setID(String ID) { } /** * Returns a name of this time zone suitable for presentation to the user * in the default locale. * This method returns the long name, not including daylight savings. * If the display name is not available for the locale, * then this method returns a string in the * normalized custom ID format. * @return the human-readable name of this time zone in the default locale. * @since 1.2 */ public final String getDisplayName() { return null; } /** * Returns a name of this time zone suitable for presentation to the user * in the specified locale. * This method returns the long name, not including daylight savings. * If the display name is not available for the locale, * then this method returns a string in the * normalized custom ID format. * @param locale the locale in which to supply the display name. * @return the human-readable name of this time zone in the given locale * or in the default locale if the given locale is not recognized. * @since 1.2 */ public final String getDisplayName(Locale locale) { return null; } /** * Returns a name of this time zone suitable for presentation to the user * in the default locale. * If the display name is not available for the locale, then this * method returns a string in the * normalized custom ID format. * @param daylight if true, return the daylight savings name. * @param style either LONG or SHORT * @return the human-readable name of this time zone in the default locale. * @since 1.2 */ public final String getDisplayName(boolean daylight, int style) { return null; } /** * Returns a name of this time zone suitable for presentation to the user * in the specified locale. * If the display name is not available for the locale, * then this method returns a string in the * normalized custom ID format. * @param daylight if true, return the daylight savings name. * @param style either LONG or SHORT * @param locale the locale in which to supply the display name. * @return the human-readable name of this time zone in the given locale * or in the default locale if the given locale is not recognized. * @exception IllegalArgumentException style is invalid. * @since 1.2 */ public String getDisplayName(boolean daylight, int style, Locale locale) { return null; } /** * Returns the amount of time to be added to local standard time * to get local wall clock time. *

* The default implementation always returns 3600000 milliseconds * (i.e., one hour) if this time zone observes Daylight Saving * Time. Otherwise, 0 (zero) is returned. *

* If an underlying TimeZone implementation subclass supports * historical Daylight Saving Time changes, this method returns * the known latest daylight saving value. * * @return the amount of saving time in milliseconds * @since 1.4 */ public int getDSTSavings() { return 0; } /** * Queries if this time zone uses daylight savings time. *

* If an underlying TimeZone implementation subclass * supports historical Daylight Saving Time schedule changes, the * method refers to the latest Daylight Saving Time schedule * information. * * @return true if this time zone uses daylight savings time, * false, otherwise. */ public abstract boolean useDaylightTime(); /** * Queries if the given date is in daylight savings time in * this time zone. * @param date the given Date. * @return true if the given date is in daylight savings time, * false, otherwise. */ public abstract boolean inDaylightTime(Date date); /** * Gets the TimeZone for the given ID. * * @param ID the ID for a TimeZone, either an abbreviation * such as "PST", a full name such as "America/Los_Angeles", or a custom * ID such as "GMT-8:00". Note that the support of abbreviations is * for JDK 1.1.x compatibility only and full names should be used. * * @return the specified TimeZone, or the GMT zone if the given ID * cannot be understood. */ public static synchronized TimeZone getTimeZone(String ID) { return null; } /** * Gets the available IDs according to the given time zone offset. * @param rawOffset the given time zone GMT offset. * @return an array of IDs, where the time zone for that ID has * the specified GMT offset. For example, "America/Phoenix" and "America/Denver" * both have GMT-07:00, but differ in daylight savings behavior. */ public static synchronized String[] getAvailableIDs(int rawOffset) { return null; } /** * Gets all the available IDs supported. * @return an array of IDs. */ public static synchronized String[] getAvailableIDs() { return null; } /** * Gets the default TimeZone for this host. * The source of the default TimeZone * may vary with implementation. * @return a default TimeZone. * @see #setDefault */ public static synchronized TimeZone getDefault() { return null; } /** * Sets the TimeZone that is * returned by the getDefault method. If zone * is null, reset the default to the value it had originally when the * VM first started. * @param zone the new default time zone * @see #getDefault */ public static synchronized void setDefault(TimeZone zone) { } /** * Returns true if this zone has the same rule and offset as another zone. * That is, if this zone differs only in ID, if at all. Returns false * if the other zone is null. * @param other the TimeZone object to be compared with * @return true if the other zone is not null and is the same as this one, * with the possible exception of the ID * @since 1.2 */ public boolean hasSameRules(TimeZone other) { return false; } /** * Creates a copy of this TimeZone. * * @return a clone of this TimeZone */ public Object clone() { return null; } }





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