Yek - I also chose to do this.

Regards - Wayne Riesterer

On Mar 10, 11:04 am, Yek Chong <yeo.yek.ch...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm also working on the homework and am puzzled too.  Perhaps, the
> exercise is to point out the difference between locale and timezone
> setting.  And that there are some methods not affected by locale
> setting.  So, I'm going to do the homework by following the
> instruction word for word.  And have the two results showing the same
> answer.
>
> Regards,
> Yek Chong
>
> On Mar 2, 5:47 am, Paul Wigham <paulrwig...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi Wayne,
>
> > I have just got to the same homework and am also struggling with how
> > the Locale fits in with the output of Calendar.DATE and Calendar.HOUR
> > as there doesn't seem to be a way of varying this by passing a
> > different Locale. Isn't the use of Locale.getDefault() and
> > Locale.GERMAN for translating such items as the Month?
>
> > Did you manage to get anywhere with this at all? Any input would be
> > great.
>
> > Cheers,
> > Paul
>
> > On Feb 17, 4:41 am, Wayne Riesterer <nexus...@westnet.com.au> wrote:
>
> > > Hello there JavaBeans :)
>
> > > I'm struggling to work out a method of completing the homework
> > > exercise for java_util.
>
> > > Here is the task:
>
> > > "Display the Calendar.DATE, Calendar.HOUR using the locale of your
> > > country (you can use Locale.getDefault()) and German" (taken from
> > > javase_utilclasses/index.html)
>
> > > I thought that I could use the getDisplayName() method and pass in the
> > > appropriate arguments. When I did this, however, I kept getting null
> > > values for both Calendar.DATE and Calendar.HOUR fields. I checked the
> > > API documentation and saw that both of these fields are just Integer
> > > data types. In fact Calendar.DATE is a synonym for
> > > Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH and simply reports what day number of the month
> > > it is.
>
> > > So, I'm wondering, how would Locale apply in this situation? I even
> > > thought that if I tried other locales, there may be some kind of
> > > difference - but there didn't appear to be any variation at all.
>
> > > I ended up passing two locales to a display method that created
> > > Calendar objects using the provided locales. Once this was done, the
> > > display method then displayed the Calendar.DATE and Calendar.HOUR
> > > fields as required.
>
> > > It doesn't seem quite right though. I was even considering changing
> > > the time zones just to make the application seem like it is actually
> > > doing something useful - by this wasn't specified in the homework
> > > description. I don't want to submit my homework if I'm not quite sure
> > > that I've done it correctly.
>
> > > Any ideas, comments, ...abuse etc?
>
> > > Regards - Wayne (fellow JavaBean)

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