This library is a version of Joda-Time built with Android in mind.
Android has built-in date and time handling - why bother with a library? If you've worked with Java's Date and Calendar classes you can probably answer this question yourself, but if not, check out Joda-Time's list of benefits.
For Android developers Joda-Time solves one critical problem: stale timezone data. Built-in timezone data is only updated when the OS is updated, and we all know how often that happens. Countries modify their timezones all the time; being able to update your own tz data keeps your app up-to-date and accurate.
I know what you are thinking: Joda-Time is a great library and it's just a single JAR, so why make things more complex by wrapping it in an Android library?
There is a particular problem with the JAR setup on Android: due to its usage of ClassLoader.getResourceAsStream(), it greatly inflates its memory footprint on apps. (For more details, see this blog post.) This library avoids the problem for Android by loading from resources instead of a JAR.
This library also has extra utilities designed for Android. For example, see DateUtils, a port of Android's DateUtils.
Add the following dependency to build.gradle
:
dependencies {
implementation("net.danlew:android.joda:2.10.9.1")
}
Due to using App Startup, joda-time-android will not automatically initialize in non-main processes.
If you would like to automatically run App Startup in other processes, add this to your manifest:
<provider
android:name="androidx.startup.InitializationProvider"
android:authorities="${applicationId}.androidx-startup"
android:exported="false"
android:process="[your-process-name-here]"
tools:node="merge" />
Alternatively, you can call AppInitializer
directly to initialize just joda-time-android:
AppInitializer.getInstance(this).initializeComponent(JodaTimeInitializer::class.java)
Q: My build fails with an error about a duplicate file
Duplicate files copied in APK META-INF/LICENSE.txt
or
Duplicate files copied in APK META-INF/NOTICE.txt
A: We can safely exclude those files from our build. You need to specify these two exclude
s in your build.gradle
file and you will be good to go:
android {
...
packagingOptions {
exclude 'META-INF/LICENSE.txt'
exclude 'META-INF/NOTICE.txt'
}
}
or
B: We can safely choose to add those files to our build. You need to specify these two merge
s in your build.gradle
file and you will be good to go:
android {
...
packagingOptions {
merge '**/LICENSE.txt'
merge '**/NOTICE.txt'
}
}