The normalized() method of the ZoneOffset class in Java is used to normalize the time-zone ID and returns a ZoneOffset where possible.
The method returns a normalized ZoneOffset that can be used in place of this ID. The normalization process checks if the rules of this ZoneOffset have a fixed offset. If ZoneOffset has fixed offset then the ZoneOffset equal to that offset is returned. Otherwise, this is returned.
Syntax:
public ZoneId normalized()
Parameters: This method accepts nothing.
Return value: This method returns the time-zone unique ID.
Below programs illustrate the normalized() method:
Program 1:
// Java program to demonstrate // ZoneOffset.normalized() method import java.time.*; public class GFG { public static void main(String[] args) { // Get the ZoneOffset instance ZoneOffset zoneOffset = ZoneOffset.of( "+05:30" ); // get and print normalised zoneId System.out.println( "Normalised zoneId: " + zoneOffset.normalized()); } } |
Normalised zoneId: +05:30
Program 2:
// Java program to demonstrate // ZoneOffset.normalized() method import java.time.*; public class GFG { public static void main(String[] args) { // Get the ZoneOffset instance ZoneOffset zoneOffset = ZoneOffset.of( "Z" ); // get and print Id System.out.println( "Normalised zoneId: " + zoneOffset.normalized()); } } |
Normalised zoneId: Z
Reference: Oracle Doc