A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/java/zoneddatetime-minusnanos-method-in-java-with-examples/ below:

ZonedDateTime minusNanos() method in Java with Examples

ZonedDateTime minusNanos() method in Java with Examples

Last Updated : 10 Dec, 2018

minusNanos()

method of a

ZonedDateTime

class used to subtract the number of nanoseconds from this ZonedDateTime and return a copy of ZonedDateTime after subtraction.This method works on the instant timeline and subtracting one nanosecond return the timeline of one nanosecond earlier. Note that this method is a different approach to that used by days, months and years. This instance is immutable and unaffected by this method call.

Syntax:
public ZonedDateTime minusNanos(long nanoseconds)
Parameters:

This method accepts a single parameter

nanoseconds

which represents the nanoseconds to subtract, It can be negative.

Return value:

This method returns a

ZonedDateTime

based on this date-time with the nanoseconds subtracted.

Exception:

This method throws

DateTimeException

if the result exceeds the supported date range. Below programs illustrate the minusNanos() method:

Program 1: Java
// Java program to demonstrate
// ZonedDateTime.minusNanos() method

import java.time.*;

public class GFG {
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {

        // create a ZonedDateTime object
        ZonedDateTime zoneddatetime
            = ZonedDateTime.parse(
                "2018-12-06T19:21:12.123+05:30[Asia/Calcutta]");

        // print instance
        System.out.println("ZonedDateTime before"
                           + " subtracting nanoseconds: "
                           + zoneddatetime);

        // subtract 30000000 nanoseconds
        ZonedDateTime returnvalue
            = zoneddatetime.minusNanos(30000000);

        // print result
        System.out.println("ZonedDateTime after "
                           + " subtracting 30000000 nanoseconds: "
                           + returnvalue);
    }
}
Output:
ZonedDateTime before subtracting nanoseconds: 2018-12-06T19:21:12.123+05:30[Asia/Calcutta] ZonedDateTime after subtracting 30000000 nanoseconds: 2018-12-06T19:21:12.093+05:30[Asia/Calcutta]
Program 2: Java
// Java program to demonstrate
// ZonedDateTime.minusNanos() method

import java.time.*;

public class GFG {
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {

        // create a ZonedDateTime object
        ZonedDateTime zoneddatetime
            = ZonedDateTime.parse(
                "2018-10-25T23:12:31.123+02:00[Europe/Paris]");

        // print instance
        System.out.println("ZonedDateTime before"
                           + " subtracting nanoseconds: "
                           + zoneddatetime);

        // subtract 52000000 nanoseconds
        ZonedDateTime returnvalue
            = zoneddatetime.minusNanos(52000000);

        // print result
        System.out.println("ZonedDateTime after "
                           + " subtracting 52000000 nanoseconds: "
                           + returnvalue);
    }
}
Output:
ZonedDateTime before subtracting nanoseconds: 2018-10-25T23:12:31.123+02:00[Europe/Paris] ZonedDateTime after subtracting 52000000 nanoseconds: 2018-10-25T23:12:31.071+02:00[Europe/Paris]
Reference: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/10/docs/api/java/time/ZonedDateTime.html#minusNanos(long)

RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.4