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3 * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
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25
26/*
27 * This file is available under and governed by the GNU General Public
28 * License version 2 only, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
29 * However, the following notice accompanied the original version of this
30 * file:
31 *
32 * Copyright (c) 2012, Stephen Colebourne & Michael Nascimento Santos
33 *
34 * All rights reserved.
35 *
36 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
37 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
38 *
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40 *    this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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42 *  * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
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45 *
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47 *    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
48 *    without specific prior written permission.
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50 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
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61 */
62package java.time.chrono;
63
64import static java.time.temporal.ChronoField.HOUR_OF_DAY;
65import static java.time.temporal.ChronoField.MINUTE_OF_HOUR;
66import static java.time.temporal.ChronoField.SECOND_OF_MINUTE;
67
68import java.time.Clock;
69import java.time.DateTimeException;
70import java.time.Instant;
71import java.time.LocalDate;
72import java.time.LocalTime;
73import java.time.ZoneId;
74import java.time.ZoneOffset;
75import java.time.format.DateTimeFormatterBuilder;
76import java.time.format.ResolverStyle;
77import java.time.format.TextStyle;
78import java.time.temporal.ChronoField;
79import java.time.temporal.TemporalAccessor;
80import java.time.temporal.TemporalField;
81import java.time.temporal.TemporalQueries;
82import java.time.temporal.TemporalQuery;
83import java.time.temporal.UnsupportedTemporalTypeException;
84import java.time.temporal.ValueRange;
85import java.util.List;
86import java.util.Locale;
87import java.util.Map;
88import java.util.Objects;
89import java.util.Set;
90
91/**
92 * A calendar system, used to organize and identify dates.
93 * <p>
94 * The main date and time API is built on the ISO calendar system.
95 * The chronology operates behind the scenes to represent the general concept of a calendar system.
96 * For example, the Japanese, Minguo, Thai Buddhist and others.
97 * <p>
98 * Most other calendar systems also operate on the shared concepts of year, month and day,
99 * linked to the cycles of the Earth around the Sun, and the Moon around the Earth.
100 * These shared concepts are defined by {@link ChronoField} and are available
101 * for use by any {@code Chronology} implementation:
102 * <pre>
103 *   LocalDate isoDate = ...
104 *   ThaiBuddhistDate thaiDate = ...
105 *   int isoYear = isoDate.get(ChronoField.YEAR);
106 *   int thaiYear = thaiDate.get(ChronoField.YEAR);
107 * </pre>
108 * As shown, although the date objects are in different calendar systems, represented by different
109 * {@code Chronology} instances, both can be queried using the same constant on {@code ChronoField}.
110 * For a full discussion of the implications of this, see {@link ChronoLocalDate}.
111 * In general, the advice is to use the known ISO-based {@code LocalDate}, rather than
112 * {@code ChronoLocalDate}.
113 * <p>
114 * While a {@code Chronology} object typically uses {@code ChronoField} and is based on
115 * an era, year-of-era, month-of-year, day-of-month model of a date, this is not required.
116 * A {@code Chronology} instance may represent a totally different kind of calendar system,
117 * such as the Mayan.
118 * <p>
119 * In practical terms, the {@code Chronology} instance also acts as a factory.
120 * The {@link #of(String)} method allows an instance to be looked up by identifier,
121 * while the {@link #ofLocale(Locale)} method allows lookup by locale.
122 * <p>
123 * The {@code Chronology} instance provides a set of methods to create {@code ChronoLocalDate} instances.
124 * The date classes are used to manipulate specific dates.
125 * <ul>
126 * <li> {@link #dateNow() dateNow()}
127 * <li> {@link #dateNow(Clock) dateNow(clock)}
128 * <li> {@link #dateNow(ZoneId) dateNow(zone)}
129 * <li> {@link #date(int, int, int) date(yearProleptic, month, day)}
130 * <li> {@link #date(Era, int, int, int) date(era, yearOfEra, month, day)}
131 * <li> {@link #dateYearDay(int, int) dateYearDay(yearProleptic, dayOfYear)}
132 * <li> {@link #dateYearDay(Era, int, int) dateYearDay(era, yearOfEra, dayOfYear)}
133 * <li> {@link #date(TemporalAccessor) date(TemporalAccessor)}
134 * </ul>
135 *
136 * <h3 id="addcalendars">Adding New Calendars</h3>
137 * The set of available chronologies can be extended by applications.
138 * Adding a new calendar system requires the writing of an implementation of
139 * {@code Chronology}, {@code ChronoLocalDate} and {@code Era}.
140 * The majority of the logic specific to the calendar system will be in the
141 * {@code ChronoLocalDate} implementation.
142 * The {@code Chronology} implementation acts as a factory.
143 * <p>
144 * To permit the discovery of additional chronologies, the {@link java.util.ServiceLoader ServiceLoader}
145 * is used. A file must be added to the {@code META-INF/services} directory with the
146 * name 'java.time.chrono.Chronology' listing the implementation classes.
147 * See the ServiceLoader for more details on service loading.
148 * For lookup by id or calendarType, the system provided calendars are found
149 * first followed by application provided calendars.
150 * <p>
151 * Each chronology must define a chronology ID that is unique within the system.
152 * If the chronology represents a calendar system defined by the
153 * CLDR specification then the calendar type is the concatenation of the
154 * CLDR type and, if applicable, the CLDR variant.
155 *
156 * @implSpec
157 * This interface must be implemented with care to ensure other classes operate correctly.
158 * All implementations that can be instantiated must be final, immutable and thread-safe.
159 * Subclasses should be Serializable wherever possible.
160 *
161 * @since 1.8
162 */
163public interface Chronology extends Comparable<Chronology> {
164
165    /**
166     * Obtains an instance of {@code Chronology} from a temporal object.
167     * <p>
168     * This obtains a chronology based on the specified temporal.
169     * A {@code TemporalAccessor} represents an arbitrary set of date and time information,
170     * which this factory converts to an instance of {@code Chronology}.
171     * <p>
172     * The conversion will obtain the chronology using {@link TemporalQueries#chronology()}.
173     * If the specified temporal object does not have a chronology, {@link IsoChronology} is returned.
174     * <p>
175     * This method matches the signature of the functional interface {@link TemporalQuery}
176     * allowing it to be used as a query via method reference, {@code Chronology::from}.
177     *
178     * @param temporal  the temporal to convert, not null
179     * @return the chronology, not null
180     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to convert to a {@code Chronology}
181     */
182    static Chronology from(TemporalAccessor temporal) {
183        Objects.requireNonNull(temporal, "temporal");
184        Chronology obj = temporal.query(TemporalQueries.chronology());
185        return Objects.requireNonNullElse(obj, IsoChronology.INSTANCE);
186    }
187
188    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
189    /**
190     * Obtains an instance of {@code Chronology} from a locale.
191     * <p>
192     * This returns a {@code Chronology} based on the specified locale,
193     * typically returning {@code IsoChronology}. Other calendar systems
194     * are only returned if they are explicitly selected within the locale.
195     * <p>
196     * The {@link Locale} class provide access to a range of information useful
197     * for localizing an application. This includes the language and region,
198     * such as "en-GB" for English as used in Great Britain.
199     * <p>
200     * The {@code Locale} class also supports an extension mechanism that
201     * can be used to identify a calendar system. The mechanism is a form
202     * of key-value pairs, where the calendar system has the key "ca".
203     * For example, the locale "en-JP-u-ca-japanese" represents the English
204     * language as used in Japan with the Japanese calendar system.
205     * <p>
206     * This method finds the desired calendar system in a manner equivalent
207     * to passing "ca" to {@link Locale#getUnicodeLocaleType(String)}.
208     * If the "ca" key is not present, then {@code IsoChronology} is returned.
209     * <p>
210     * Note that the behavior of this method differs from the older
211     * {@link java.util.Calendar#getInstance(Locale)} method.
212     * If that method receives a locale of "th_TH" it will return {@code BuddhistCalendar}.
213     * By contrast, this method will return {@code IsoChronology}.
214     * Passing the locale "th-TH-u-ca-buddhist" into either method will
215     * result in the Thai Buddhist calendar system and is therefore the
216     * recommended approach going forward for Thai calendar system localization.
217     * <p>
218     * A similar, but simpler, situation occurs for the Japanese calendar system.
219     * The locale "jp_JP_JP" has previously been used to access the calendar.
220     * However, unlike the Thai locale, "ja_JP_JP" is automatically converted by
221     * {@code Locale} to the modern and recommended form of "ja-JP-u-ca-japanese".
222     * Thus, there is no difference in behavior between this method and
223     * {@code Calendar#getInstance(Locale)}.
224     *
225     * @param locale  the locale to use to obtain the calendar system, not null
226     * @return the calendar system associated with the locale, not null
227     * @throws DateTimeException if the locale-specified calendar cannot be found
228     */
229    static Chronology ofLocale(Locale locale) {
230        return AbstractChronology.ofLocale(locale);
231    }
232
233    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
234    /**
235     * Obtains an instance of {@code Chronology} from a chronology ID or
236     * calendar system type.
237     * <p>
238     * This returns a chronology based on either the ID or the type.
239     * The {@link #getId() chronology ID} uniquely identifies the chronology.
240     * The {@link #getCalendarType() calendar system type} is defined by the
241     * CLDR specification.
242     * <p>
243     * The chronology may be a system chronology or a chronology
244     * provided by the application via ServiceLoader configuration.
245     * <p>
246     * Since some calendars can be customized, the ID or type typically refers
247     * to the default customization. For example, the Gregorian calendar can have multiple
248     * cutover dates from the Julian, but the lookup only provides the default cutover date.
249     *
250     * @param id  the chronology ID or calendar system type, not null
251     * @return the chronology with the identifier requested, not null
252     * @throws DateTimeException if the chronology cannot be found
253     */
254    static Chronology of(String id) {
255        return AbstractChronology.of(id);
256    }
257
258    /**
259     * Returns the available chronologies.
260     * <p>
261     * Each returned {@code Chronology} is available for use in the system.
262     * The set of chronologies includes the system chronologies and
263     * any chronologies provided by the application via ServiceLoader
264     * configuration.
265     *
266     * @return the independent, modifiable set of the available chronology IDs, not null
267     */
268    static Set<Chronology> getAvailableChronologies() {
269        return AbstractChronology.getAvailableChronologies();
270    }
271
272    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
273    /**
274     * Gets the ID of the chronology.
275     * <p>
276     * The ID uniquely identifies the {@code Chronology}.
277     * It can be used to lookup the {@code Chronology} using {@link #of(String)}.
278     *
279     * @return the chronology ID, not null
280     * @see #getCalendarType()
281     */
282    String getId();
283
284    /**
285     * Gets the calendar type of the calendar system.
286     * <p>
287     * The calendar type is an identifier defined by the CLDR and
288     * <em>Unicode Locale Data Markup Language (LDML)</em> specifications
289     * to uniquely identify a calendar.
290     * The {@code getCalendarType} is the concatenation of the CLDR calendar type
291     * and the variant, if applicable, is appended separated by "-".
292     * The calendar type is used to lookup the {@code Chronology} using {@link #of(String)}.
293     *
294     * @return the calendar system type, null if the calendar is not defined by CLDR/LDML
295     * @see #getId()
296     */
297    String getCalendarType();
298
299    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
300    /**
301     * Obtains a local date in this chronology from the era, year-of-era,
302     * month-of-year and day-of-month fields.
303     *
304     * @implSpec
305     * The default implementation combines the era and year-of-era into a proleptic
306     * year before calling {@link #date(int, int, int)}.
307     *
308     * @param era  the era of the correct type for the chronology, not null
309     * @param yearOfEra  the chronology year-of-era
310     * @param month  the chronology month-of-year
311     * @param dayOfMonth  the chronology day-of-month
312     * @return the local date in this chronology, not null
313     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
314     * @throws ClassCastException if the {@code era} is not of the correct type for the chronology
315     */
316    default ChronoLocalDate date(Era era, int yearOfEra, int month, int dayOfMonth) {
317        return date(prolepticYear(era, yearOfEra), month, dayOfMonth);
318    }
319
320    /**
321     * Obtains a local date in this chronology from the proleptic-year,
322     * month-of-year and day-of-month fields.
323     *
324     * @param prolepticYear  the chronology proleptic-year
325     * @param month  the chronology month-of-year
326     * @param dayOfMonth  the chronology day-of-month
327     * @return the local date in this chronology, not null
328     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
329     */
330    ChronoLocalDate date(int prolepticYear, int month, int dayOfMonth);
331
332    /**
333     * Obtains a local date in this chronology from the era, year-of-era and
334     * day-of-year fields.
335     *
336     * @implSpec
337     * The default implementation combines the era and year-of-era into a proleptic
338     * year before calling {@link #dateYearDay(int, int)}.
339     *
340     * @param era  the era of the correct type for the chronology, not null
341     * @param yearOfEra  the chronology year-of-era
342     * @param dayOfYear  the chronology day-of-year
343     * @return the local date in this chronology, not null
344     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
345     * @throws ClassCastException if the {@code era} is not of the correct type for the chronology
346     */
347    default ChronoLocalDate dateYearDay(Era era, int yearOfEra, int dayOfYear) {
348        return dateYearDay(prolepticYear(era, yearOfEra), dayOfYear);
349    }
350
351    /**
352     * Obtains a local date in this chronology from the proleptic-year and
353     * day-of-year fields.
354     *
355     * @param prolepticYear  the chronology proleptic-year
356     * @param dayOfYear  the chronology day-of-year
357     * @return the local date in this chronology, not null
358     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
359     */
360    ChronoLocalDate dateYearDay(int prolepticYear, int dayOfYear);
361
362    /**
363     * Obtains a local date in this chronology from the epoch-day.
364     * <p>
365     * The definition of {@link ChronoField#EPOCH_DAY EPOCH_DAY} is the same
366     * for all calendar systems, thus it can be used for conversion.
367     *
368     * @param epochDay  the epoch day
369     * @return the local date in this chronology, not null
370     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
371     */
372    ChronoLocalDate dateEpochDay(long epochDay);
373
374    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
375    /**
376     * Obtains the current local date in this chronology from the system clock in the default time-zone.
377     * <p>
378     * This will query the {@link Clock#systemDefaultZone() system clock} in the default
379     * time-zone to obtain the current date.
380     * <p>
381     * Using this method will prevent the ability to use an alternate clock for testing
382     * because the clock is hard-coded.
383     *
384     * @implSpec
385     * The default implementation invokes {@link #dateNow(Clock)}.
386     *
387     * @return the current local date using the system clock and default time-zone, not null
388     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
389     */
390    default ChronoLocalDate dateNow() {
391        return dateNow(Clock.systemDefaultZone());
392    }
393
394    /**
395     * Obtains the current local date in this chronology from the system clock in the specified time-zone.
396     * <p>
397     * This will query the {@link Clock#system(ZoneId) system clock} to obtain the current date.
398     * Specifying the time-zone avoids dependence on the default time-zone.
399     * <p>
400     * Using this method will prevent the ability to use an alternate clock for testing
401     * because the clock is hard-coded.
402     *
403     * @implSpec
404     * The default implementation invokes {@link #dateNow(Clock)}.
405     *
406     * @param zone  the zone ID to use, not null
407     * @return the current local date using the system clock, not null
408     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
409     */
410    default ChronoLocalDate dateNow(ZoneId zone) {
411        return dateNow(Clock.system(zone));
412    }
413
414    /**
415     * Obtains the current local date in this chronology from the specified clock.
416     * <p>
417     * This will query the specified clock to obtain the current date - today.
418     * Using this method allows the use of an alternate clock for testing.
419     * The alternate clock may be introduced using {@link Clock dependency injection}.
420     *
421     * @implSpec
422     * The default implementation invokes {@link #date(TemporalAccessor)}.
423     *
424     * @param clock  the clock to use, not null
425     * @return the current local date, not null
426     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
427     */
428    default ChronoLocalDate dateNow(Clock clock) {
429        Objects.requireNonNull(clock, "clock");
430        return date(LocalDate.now(clock));
431    }
432
433    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
434    /**
435     * Obtains a local date in this chronology from another temporal object.
436     * <p>
437     * This obtains a date in this chronology based on the specified temporal.
438     * A {@code TemporalAccessor} represents an arbitrary set of date and time information,
439     * which this factory converts to an instance of {@code ChronoLocalDate}.
440     * <p>
441     * The conversion typically uses the {@link ChronoField#EPOCH_DAY EPOCH_DAY}
442     * field, which is standardized across calendar systems.
443     * <p>
444     * This method matches the signature of the functional interface {@link TemporalQuery}
445     * allowing it to be used as a query via method reference, {@code aChronology::date}.
446     *
447     * @param temporal  the temporal object to convert, not null
448     * @return the local date in this chronology, not null
449     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date
450     * @see ChronoLocalDate#from(TemporalAccessor)
451     */
452    ChronoLocalDate date(TemporalAccessor temporal);
453
454    /**
455     * Obtains a local date-time in this chronology from another temporal object.
456     * <p>
457     * This obtains a date-time in this chronology based on the specified temporal.
458     * A {@code TemporalAccessor} represents an arbitrary set of date and time information,
459     * which this factory converts to an instance of {@code ChronoLocalDateTime}.
460     * <p>
461     * The conversion extracts and combines the {@code ChronoLocalDate} and the
462     * {@code LocalTime} from the temporal object.
463     * Implementations are permitted to perform optimizations such as accessing
464     * those fields that are equivalent to the relevant objects.
465     * The result uses this chronology.
466     * <p>
467     * This method matches the signature of the functional interface {@link TemporalQuery}
468     * allowing it to be used as a query via method reference, {@code aChronology::localDateTime}.
469     *
470     * @param temporal  the temporal object to convert, not null
471     * @return the local date-time in this chronology, not null
472     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date-time
473     * @see ChronoLocalDateTime#from(TemporalAccessor)
474     */
475    default ChronoLocalDateTime<? extends ChronoLocalDate> localDateTime(TemporalAccessor temporal) {
476        try {
477            return date(temporal).atTime(LocalTime.from(temporal));
478        } catch (DateTimeException ex) {
479            throw new DateTimeException("Unable to obtain ChronoLocalDateTime from TemporalAccessor: " + temporal.getClass(), ex);
480        }
481    }
482
483    /**
484     * Obtains a {@code ChronoZonedDateTime} in this chronology from another temporal object.
485     * <p>
486     * This obtains a zoned date-time in this chronology based on the specified temporal.
487     * A {@code TemporalAccessor} represents an arbitrary set of date and time information,
488     * which this factory converts to an instance of {@code ChronoZonedDateTime}.
489     * <p>
490     * The conversion will first obtain a {@code ZoneId} from the temporal object,
491     * falling back to a {@code ZoneOffset} if necessary. It will then try to obtain
492     * an {@code Instant}, falling back to a {@code ChronoLocalDateTime} if necessary.
493     * The result will be either the combination of {@code ZoneId} or {@code ZoneOffset}
494     * with {@code Instant} or {@code ChronoLocalDateTime}.
495     * Implementations are permitted to perform optimizations such as accessing
496     * those fields that are equivalent to the relevant objects.
497     * The result uses this chronology.
498     * <p>
499     * This method matches the signature of the functional interface {@link TemporalQuery}
500     * allowing it to be used as a query via method reference, {@code aChronology::zonedDateTime}.
501     *
502     * @param temporal  the temporal object to convert, not null
503     * @return the zoned date-time in this chronology, not null
504     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the date-time
505     * @see ChronoZonedDateTime#from(TemporalAccessor)
506     */
507    default ChronoZonedDateTime<? extends ChronoLocalDate> zonedDateTime(TemporalAccessor temporal) {
508        try {
509            ZoneId zone = ZoneId.from(temporal);
510            try {
511                Instant instant = Instant.from(temporal);
512                return zonedDateTime(instant, zone);
513
514            } catch (DateTimeException ex1) {
515                ChronoLocalDateTimeImpl<?> cldt = ChronoLocalDateTimeImpl.ensureValid(this, localDateTime(temporal));
516                return ChronoZonedDateTimeImpl.ofBest(cldt, zone, null);
517            }
518        } catch (DateTimeException ex) {
519            throw new DateTimeException("Unable to obtain ChronoZonedDateTime from TemporalAccessor: " + temporal.getClass(), ex);
520        }
521    }
522
523    /**
524     * Obtains a {@code ChronoZonedDateTime} in this chronology from an {@code Instant}.
525     * <p>
526     * This obtains a zoned date-time with the same instant as that specified.
527     *
528     * @param instant  the instant to create the date-time from, not null
529     * @param zone  the time-zone, not null
530     * @return the zoned date-time, not null
531     * @throws DateTimeException if the result exceeds the supported range
532     */
533    default ChronoZonedDateTime<? extends ChronoLocalDate> zonedDateTime(Instant instant, ZoneId zone) {
534        return ChronoZonedDateTimeImpl.ofInstant(this, instant, zone);
535    }
536
537    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
538    /**
539     * Checks if the specified year is a leap year.
540     * <p>
541     * A leap-year is a year of a longer length than normal.
542     * The exact meaning is determined by the chronology according to the following constraints.
543     * <ul>
544     * <li>a leap-year must imply a year-length longer than a non leap-year.
545     * <li>a chronology that does not support the concept of a year must return false.
546     * <li>the correct result must be returned for all years within the
547     *     valid range of years for the chronology.
548     * </ul>
549     * <p>
550     * Outside the range of valid years an implementation is free to return
551     * either a best guess or false.
552     * An implementation must not throw an exception, even if the year is
553     * outside the range of valid years.
554     *
555     * @param prolepticYear  the proleptic-year to check, not validated for range
556     * @return true if the year is a leap year
557     */
558    boolean isLeapYear(long prolepticYear);
559
560    /**
561     * Calculates the proleptic-year given the era and year-of-era.
562     * <p>
563     * This combines the era and year-of-era into the single proleptic-year field.
564     * <p>
565     * If the chronology makes active use of eras, such as {@code JapaneseChronology}
566     * then the year-of-era will be validated against the era.
567     * For other chronologies, validation is optional.
568     *
569     * @param era  the era of the correct type for the chronology, not null
570     * @param yearOfEra  the chronology year-of-era
571     * @return the proleptic-year
572     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to convert to a proleptic-year,
573     *  such as if the year is invalid for the era
574     * @throws ClassCastException if the {@code era} is not of the correct type for the chronology
575     */
576    int prolepticYear(Era era, int yearOfEra);
577
578    /**
579     * Creates the chronology era object from the numeric value.
580     * <p>
581     * The era is, conceptually, the largest division of the time-line.
582     * Most calendar systems have a single epoch dividing the time-line into two eras.
583     * However, some have multiple eras, such as one for the reign of each leader.
584     * The exact meaning is determined by the chronology according to the following constraints.
585     * <p>
586     * The era in use at 1970-01-01 must have the value 1.
587     * Later eras must have sequentially higher values.
588     * Earlier eras must have sequentially lower values.
589     * Each chronology must refer to an enum or similar singleton to provide the era values.
590     * <p>
591     * This method returns the singleton era of the correct type for the specified era value.
592     *
593     * @param eraValue  the era value
594     * @return the calendar system era, not null
595     * @throws DateTimeException if unable to create the era
596     */
597    Era eraOf(int eraValue);
598
599    /**
600     * Gets the list of eras for the chronology.
601     * <p>
602     * Most calendar systems have an era, within which the year has meaning.
603     * If the calendar system does not support the concept of eras, an empty
604     * list must be returned.
605     *
606     * @return the list of eras for the chronology, may be immutable, not null
607     */
608    List<Era> eras();
609
610    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
611    /**
612     * Gets the range of valid values for the specified field.
613     * <p>
614     * All fields can be expressed as a {@code long} integer.
615     * This method returns an object that describes the valid range for that value.
616     * <p>
617     * Note that the result only describes the minimum and maximum valid values
618     * and it is important not to read too much into them. For example, there
619     * could be values within the range that are invalid for the field.
620     * <p>
621     * This method will return a result whether or not the chronology supports the field.
622     *
623     * @param field  the field to get the range for, not null
624     * @return the range of valid values for the field, not null
625     * @throws DateTimeException if the range for the field cannot be obtained
626     */
627    ValueRange range(ChronoField field);
628
629    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
630    /**
631     * Gets the textual representation of this chronology.
632     * <p>
633     * This returns the textual name used to identify the chronology,
634     * suitable for presentation to the user.
635     * The parameters control the style of the returned text and the locale.
636     *
637     * @implSpec
638     * The default implementation behaves as though the formatter was used to
639     * format the chronology textual name.
640     *
641     * @param style  the style of the text required, not null
642     * @param locale  the locale to use, not null
643     * @return the text value of the chronology, not null
644     */
645    default String getDisplayName(TextStyle style, Locale locale) {
646        TemporalAccessor temporal = new TemporalAccessor() {
647            @Override
648            public boolean isSupported(TemporalField field) {
649                return false;
650            }
651            @Override
652            public long getLong(TemporalField field) {
653                throw new UnsupportedTemporalTypeException("Unsupported field: " + field);
654            }
655            @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
656            @Override
657            public <R> R query(TemporalQuery<R> query) {
658                if (query == TemporalQueries.chronology()) {
659                    return (R) Chronology.this;
660                }
661                return TemporalAccessor.super.query(query);
662            }
663        };
664        return new DateTimeFormatterBuilder().appendChronologyText(style).toFormatter(locale).format(temporal);
665    }
666
667    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
668    /**
669     * Resolves parsed {@code ChronoField} values into a date during parsing.
670     * <p>
671     * Most {@code TemporalField} implementations are resolved using the
672     * resolve method on the field. By contrast, the {@code ChronoField} class
673     * defines fields that only have meaning relative to the chronology.
674     * As such, {@code ChronoField} date fields are resolved here in the
675     * context of a specific chronology.
676     * <p>
677     * The default implementation, which explains typical resolve behaviour,
678     * is provided in {@link AbstractChronology}.
679     *
680     * @param fieldValues  the map of fields to values, which can be updated, not null
681     * @param resolverStyle  the requested type of resolve, not null
682     * @return the resolved date, null if insufficient information to create a date
683     * @throws DateTimeException if the date cannot be resolved, typically
684     *  because of a conflict in the input data
685     */
686    ChronoLocalDate resolveDate(Map<TemporalField, Long> fieldValues, ResolverStyle resolverStyle);
687
688    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
689    /**
690     * Obtains a period for this chronology based on years, months and days.
691     * <p>
692     * This returns a period tied to this chronology using the specified
693     * years, months and days.  All supplied chronologies use periods
694     * based on years, months and days, however the {@code ChronoPeriod} API
695     * allows the period to be represented using other units.
696     *
697     * @implSpec
698     * The default implementation returns an implementation class suitable
699     * for most calendar systems. It is based solely on the three units.
700     * Normalization, addition and subtraction derive the number of months
701     * in a year from the {@link #range(ChronoField)}. If the number of
702     * months within a year is fixed, then the calculation approach for
703     * addition, subtraction and normalization is slightly different.
704     * <p>
705     * If implementing an unusual calendar system that is not based on
706     * years, months and days, or where you want direct control, then
707     * the {@code ChronoPeriod} interface must be directly implemented.
708     * <p>
709     * The returned period is immutable and thread-safe.
710     *
711     * @param years  the number of years, may be negative
712     * @param months  the number of years, may be negative
713     * @param days  the number of years, may be negative
714     * @return the period in terms of this chronology, not null
715     */
716    default ChronoPeriod period(int years, int months, int days) {
717        return new ChronoPeriodImpl(this, years, months, days);
718    }
719
720    //---------------------------------------------------------------------
721
722    /**
723     * Gets the number of seconds from the epoch of 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
724     * <p>
725     * The number of seconds is calculated using the proleptic-year,
726     * month, day-of-month, hour, minute, second, and zoneOffset.
727     *
728     * @param prolepticYear the chronology proleptic-year
729     * @param month the chronology month-of-year
730     * @param dayOfMonth the chronology day-of-month
731     * @param hour the hour-of-day, from 0 to 23
732     * @param minute the minute-of-hour, from 0 to 59
733     * @param second the second-of-minute, from 0 to 59
734     * @param zoneOffset the zone offset, not null
735     * @return the number of seconds relative to 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z, may be negative
736     * @throws DateTimeException if any of the values are out of range
737     * @since 9
738     */
739     public default long epochSecond(int prolepticYear, int month, int dayOfMonth,
740                                     int hour, int minute, int second, ZoneOffset zoneOffset) {
741        Objects.requireNonNull(zoneOffset, "zoneOffset");
742        HOUR_OF_DAY.checkValidValue(hour);
743        MINUTE_OF_HOUR.checkValidValue(minute);
744        SECOND_OF_MINUTE.checkValidValue(second);
745        long daysInSec = Math.multiplyExact(date(prolepticYear, month, dayOfMonth).toEpochDay(), 86400);
746        long timeinSec = (hour * 60 + minute) * 60 + second;
747        return Math.addExact(daysInSec, timeinSec - zoneOffset.getTotalSeconds());
748    }
749
750    /**
751     * Gets the number of seconds from the epoch of 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z.
752     * <p>
753     * The number of seconds is calculated using the era, year-of-era,
754     * month, day-of-month, hour, minute, second, and zoneOffset.
755     *
756     * @param era  the era of the correct type for the chronology, not null
757     * @param yearOfEra the chronology year-of-era
758     * @param month the chronology month-of-year
759     * @param dayOfMonth the chronology day-of-month
760     * @param hour the hour-of-day, from 0 to 23
761     * @param minute the minute-of-hour, from 0 to 59
762     * @param second the second-of-minute, from 0 to 59
763     * @param zoneOffset the zone offset, not null
764     * @return the number of seconds relative to 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z, may be negative
765     * @throws DateTimeException if any of the values are out of range
766     * @since 9
767     */
768     public default long epochSecond(Era era, int yearOfEra, int month, int dayOfMonth,
769                                     int hour, int minute, int second, ZoneOffset zoneOffset) {
770        Objects.requireNonNull(era, "era");
771        return epochSecond(prolepticYear(era, yearOfEra), month, dayOfMonth, hour, minute, second, zoneOffset);
772    }
773    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
774    /**
775     * Compares this chronology to another chronology.
776     * <p>
777     * The comparison order first by the chronology ID string, then by any
778     * additional information specific to the subclass.
779     * It is "consistent with equals", as defined by {@link Comparable}.
780     *
781     * @param other  the other chronology to compare to, not null
782     * @return the comparator value, negative if less, positive if greater
783     */
784    @Override
785    int compareTo(Chronology other);
786
787    /**
788     * Checks if this chronology is equal to another chronology.
789     * <p>
790     * The comparison is based on the entire state of the object.
791     *
792     * @param obj  the object to check, null returns false
793     * @return true if this is equal to the other chronology
794     */
795    @Override
796    boolean equals(Object obj);
797
798    /**
799     * A hash code for this chronology.
800     * <p>
801     * The hash code should be based on the entire state of the object.
802     *
803     * @return a suitable hash code
804     */
805    @Override
806    int hashCode();
807
808    //-----------------------------------------------------------------------
809    /**
810     * Outputs this chronology as a {@code String}.
811     * <p>
812     * The format should include the entire state of the object.
813     *
814     * @return a string representation of this chronology, not null
815     */
816    @Override
817    String toString();
818
819}
820