- java.time Package Classes
- java.time - Home
- java.time - Clock
- java.time - Duration
- java.time - Instant
- java.time - LocalDate
- java.time - LocalDateTime
- java.time - LocalTime
- java.time - MonthDay
- java.time - OffsetDateTime
- java.time - OffsetTime
- java.time - Period
- java.time - Year
- java.time - YearMonth
- java.time - ZonedDateTime
- java.time - ZoneId
- java.time - ZoneOffset
- java.time Package Enums
- java.time - Month
- java.time Useful Resources
- java.time - Discussion
java.time.Instant.plusSeconds() Method Example
Description
The java.time.Instant.plusSeconds(long secondsToAdd) method returns a copy of this instant with the specified duration in seconds added.
Declaration
Following is the declaration for java.time.Instant.plusSeconds(long secondsToAdd) method.
public Instant plusSeconds(long secondsToAdd)
Parameters
secondsToAdd − the seconds to add, positive or negative.
Return Value
an Instant based on this instant with the specified seconds added, not null.
Exceptions
DateTimeException − if the result exceeds the maximum or minimum instant.
ArithmeticException − if numeric overflow occurs.
Example
The following example shows the usage of java.time.Instant.plusSeconds(long secondsToAdd) method.
package com.tutorialspoint; import java.time.Instant; public class InstantDemo { public static void main(String[] args) { Instant instant = Instant.parse("2017-02-03T10:37:30.00Z"); Instant result = instant.plusSeconds(10); System.out.println(result); } }
Let us compile and run the above program, this will produce the following result −
2017-02-03T10:37:40Z
Advertisements