The toEpochSecond() method of java.time.zone.ZoneOffsetTransition class is used to get the epoch second for this particular zone offset transition object.
Syntax:
public long toEpochSecond()
Parameter: This method does not accept any parameter.
Return Value: This method returns the epoch second for this particular zone offset transition object.
Below are the examples to illustrate the toEpochSecond() method:
Example 1:
import java.util.*;
import java.io.*;
import java.time.*;
import java.time.chrono.*;
import java.time.zone.*;
public class GFG {
public static void main(String[] argv)
{
LocalDateTime loc
= LocalDateTime.of(
1999 , 04 , 25 ,
03 , 24 , 45 , 0 );
ZoneOffset off1
= ZoneOffset.ofTotalSeconds( 8 );
ZoneOffset off2
= ZoneOffset.ofTotalSeconds( 12 );
ZoneOffsetTransition zonetrans1
= ZoneOffsetTransition.of(
loc, off1, off2);
long epocsec
= zonetrans1.toEpochSecond();
System.out.println(
"epoch second : "
+ epocsec);
}
}
|
Output:
epoch second : 925010677
Example 2:
import java.util.*;
import java.io.*;
import java.time.*;
import java.time.chrono.*;
import java.time.zone.*;
public class GFG {
public static void main(String[] argv)
{
LocalDateTime loc
= LocalDateTime.of(
1999 , 04 , 25 ,
03 , 24 , 45 , 0 );
ZoneOffset off1
= ZoneOffset.ofTotalSeconds( 12 );
ZoneOffset off2
= ZoneOffset.ofTotalSeconds( 8 );
ZoneOffsetTransition zonetrans1
= ZoneOffsetTransition.of(
loc, off1, off2);
long epocsec
= zonetrans1.toEpochSecond();
System.out.println( "epoch second : "
+ epocsec);
}
}
|
Output:
epoch second : 925010673
Reference: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/9/docs/api/java/time/zone/ZoneOffsetTransition.html#toEpochSecond–