For a difference of 0 from UTC:
DateTimeFormatter dateFormatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MMM dd, uuuu", Locale.ENGLISH);
String selectedDate = "Jan 18, 2020";
ZonedDateTime zdt = LocalDate.parse(selectedDate, dateFormatter)
.atStartOfDay(ZoneOffset.UTC);
System.out.println(zdt);
long millisSinceEpoch = zdt.toInstant().toEpochMilli();
System.out.println(millisSinceEpoch);
Output from this snpipet is:
2020-01-18T00:00Z
1579305600000
I am using java.time, the modern Java date and time API. The classes that you used, SimpleDateFormat and Date, are poorly designed and long outdated, and no one should use them anymore.
Question: Doesn’t java.time require Android API level 26?
java.time works nicely on both older and newer Android devices. It just requires at least Java 6.
- In Java 8 and later and on newer Android devices (from API level 26) the modern API comes built-in.
- In non-Android Java 6 and 7 get the ThreeTen Backport, the backport of the modern classes (ThreeTen for JSR 310; see the links at the bottom).
- On (older) Android use the Android edition of ThreeTen Backport. It’s called ThreeTenABP. And make sure you import the date and time classes from
org.threeten.bp with subpackages.
Links