>Try, dateFormatter.setTimeZone(tz);
>after you get the timezone.
Ok, thanks.. but why does not take care of this the GregorianCalendar
(TimeZone)???
Anyway....
My problem now is that the " TimeZone.inDayligthTime(Date)" does not
return a true value and the zone is in SavingTime. And i can not find
any method that increase the time when it is in "DayligthTime".
Is always so hard to use Dates on JAVA? Is there any new version of
the Date and Gregorian Calendar? I'm finishing a big servlet and I
can't belive that the hardest thing of all the project is to put a
simple Date...
>
> >Here is my problem, I want display a servlet message with the current
>>time, but I always get the "default" time zone although I create a
>>new TimeZone.
>>Ok, please tell me what I'm doing wrong, because i'm out of ideas....
>>
>>THE SOURCE:
>>
>>Locale aLocale = new Locale("es", "CL");
>>
>>DateFormat dateFormatter= DateFormat.getDateTimeInstance
>> (DateFormat.FULL,DateFormat.FULL,aLocale);
>>
>>TimeZone tz = TimeZone.getTimeZone("EST");
>>
>>String myDate = dateFormatter.format((new
>>GregorianCalendar(tz,aLocale)).getTime());
>>
>>System.out.println(myDate);
>>
>>
>>Thanks again!
>>
>>--
> >__________________________________
--
__________________________________
Andr�s Wagner Acu�a
Estudiante Ing. Civil Industrial
Universidad Adolfo Iba�ez
ICQ: 39542425
__________________________________
"Programing today is a race between software engineers striving to
build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the universe trying
to produce bigger and better idiots...
...So far the universe is winning".
-Rich Cook
___________________________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and include in the body
of the message "signoff SERVLET-INTEREST".
Archives: http://archives.java.sun.com/archives/servlet-interest.html
Resources: http://java.sun.com/products/servlet/external-resources.html
LISTSERV Help: http://www.lsoft.com/manuals/user/user.html