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I've a problem using an attribute Calendar with JPA:

@Column(name = "Date")
@Temporal(TemporalType.DATE)
private Calendar date;

By default it is setted as mm/dd/yyyy and I need it in dd/mm/yyyy, can anyone help me?

I've seen that is quiete easy with Date instead of Calendar but i can't use it...

Thx Daniele

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  • I guess you would need a custom UserType
    – vinothkr
    May 11, 2011 at 8:50

4 Answers 4

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I think, format doesn't really matter. Neither Calendar nor Date have any format with them. Its the toString() method that formats it in the default format.

Would you care to elaborate,

  • what is the expected behaviour?
  • what you are getting?

[Edited based on the comment below]

Whatever, comes from the browser it comes as a String. So, you are having an issue while converting that String to the Date or Calendar. Fix that and all will be good after that.

Happy coding. Cheers.

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  • Basically the behaviour i that when we put a date thru a JSP, it is inserted in the DB with the wrong date format, for example if we put 1/2/2010 the result is the 2nd of january and for instance if i use 13/09/2010 it becomes the 9th of january of "2011"... in the DB it looks like this: 2012-01-09
    – Daniele
    May 11, 2011 at 9:52
  • Whatever, comes from the browser is a String. So, you got a issue while converting that String to the Date. Fix that. All will be good after that. Happy coding. ;) May 11, 2011 at 10:55
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I believe this is not a JPA issue but SQL configuration.
From what you're describing, your SQL server is configured to default format. You should change it to the format you need.

Take a look on SQL date formats - http://www.sql-server-helper.com/tips/date-formats.aspx

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  • i don't think that is a MySql issue, even because in the DB itself it is stored in a third format (yyyy-mm-dd)
    – Daniele
    May 11, 2011 at 9:46
  • 2nd option - JVM timezone settings
    – Bivas
    May 11, 2011 at 9:49
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If this is the case, why not you can try SimpleDateFormatter, where you can parse the date and using dateFormatter you can get the desired date format.For more clarification please try the link.

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  • the problem is that i can't change the model, this way i have to keep on working with Calendar instead of Date
    – Daniele
    May 11, 2011 at 10:02
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Try the following and let us know:

        String formattedDate = "";
        String requiredFormat = "MM/dd/yyyy";
        DateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("dd/MM/yyyy"); 
        Date dt = formatter.parse("13/09/2011");
        DateFormat reqFormatter = new SimpleDateFormat(requiredFormat, Locale.ENGLISH);  
        formattedDate = reqFormatter.format(dt);
        System.out.println("Output Date: " + formattedDate);

//formatted Date will give you what expects to be there in DB.

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