Using a switch statement on the values for day : Gregorian Calendar « Data Type « Java Tutorial

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Java Tutorial » Data Type » Gregorian Calendar 
2. 40. 11. Using a switch statement on the values for day
import java.util.Calendar;
import java.util.GregorianCalendar;

public class MainClass {
  public static void main(String[] a) {
    GregorianCalendar calendar = new GregorianCalendar();
    calendar.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK, Calendar.TUESDAY);
    int day = calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK);
    switch (day) {
    case Calendar.MONDAY:
      System.out.println(Calendar.MONDAY);
      break;
    case Calendar.TUESDAY:
      System.out.println(Calendar.TUESDAY);
      break;
    default:  
      System.out.println("others");
    }
  }
}
2. 40. Gregorian Calendar
2. 40. 1. Creating Gregorian Calendars
2. 40. 2. Specifying the locale(TimeZone) explicitly for Gregorian Calendar
2. 40. 3. Creating a Calendar object from a locale
2. 40. 4. Creating a Date Object for a Particular Date
2. 40. 5. Setting the Date and Time
2. 40. 6. Setting a GregorianCalendar object to a particular date
2. 40. 7. Integer constants for the third version of set()
2. 40. 8. Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK
2. 40. 9. Set with GregorianCalendar.YEAR, MONTH and DATE
2. 40. 10. Getting Date and Time Information: get the day of the week
2. 40. 11. Using a switch statement on the values for day
2. 40. 12. Modifying Dates and Times: adding 14 to the year
2. 40. 13. To go into the past: making the second argument negative in the 'add' method
2. 40. 14. To increment or decrement a field of a calendar by 1 using the roll() method
2. 40. 15. Comparing Calendars
2. 40. 16. Displaying Date by weekday name
2. 40. 17. Printing out weekday names
2. 40. 18. Determine the day of the week
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