TM-138: DateUtil doesn't support sub-hour offset timezones.

This commit is contained in:
Harald Kuhr 2015-05-27 15:50:35 +02:00
parent 203b330c99
commit 1ed5b3899b

View File

@ -150,7 +150,6 @@ public class DateUtilTest {
assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.MILLISECOND)); assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.MILLISECOND));
assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.SECOND)); assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.SECOND));
assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE)); assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE));
// assertEquals((TimeZone.getDefault().getOffset(calendar.getTimeInMillis()) / DateUtil.MINUTE) % 60, calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE));
} }
@Test @Test
@ -159,7 +158,6 @@ public class DateUtilTest {
assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.MILLISECOND)); assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.MILLISECOND));
assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.SECOND)); assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.SECOND));
// assertEquals((TimeZone.getDefault().getOffset(calendar.getTimeInMillis()) / DateUtil.MINUTE) % 60, calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE));
assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE)); assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.MINUTE));
assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY)); assertEquals(0, calendar.get(Calendar.HOUR_OF_DAY));
} }