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LocalTime plusSeconds() method in Java
An immutable copy of a LocalTime object where some seconds are added to it can be obtained using the plusSeconds() method in the LocalTime class in Java. This method requires a single parameter i.e. the number of seconds to be added and it returns the LocalTime object with the added seconds.
A program that demonstrates this is given as follows −
Example
import java.time.*; public class Demo { public static void main(String[] args) { LocalTime lt = LocalTime.now(); System.out.println("The current LocalTime is: " + lt); System.out.println("The LocalTime with 5 seconds added is: " + lt.plusSeconds(5)); } }
Output
The current LocalTime is: 08:52:22.014 The LocalTime with 5 seconds added is: 08:52:27.014
Now let us understand the above program.
First the current LocalTime is displayed. Then an immutable copy of the LocalTime where 5 seconds are added is obtained using the plusSeconds() method and this is displayed. A code snippet that demonstrates this is as follows −
LocalTime lt = LocalTime.now(); System.out.println("The current LocalTime is: " + lt); System.out.println("The LocalTime with 5 seconds added is: " + lt.plusSeconds(5));
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