13

I have a LocalDate that I'm trying to convert to a java.sql.Date to store it in a Date field in the DB. My problem is that when I convert it to a java.sql.Date it is one day behind due to the machine I'm running on being in EST. I setup Joda.DateTime to be in UTC, and creating the java.sql.Date via using the millis constructor. I'm including the output of the debug watches so you can see what the different values are:

item.getDate().toDateTimeAtStartOfDay() = {org.joda.time.DateTime@6079}"2013-09-25T00:00:00.000Z"
item.getDate().toDateTimeAtStartOfDay().getMillis() = 1380067200000
new java.sql.Date(item.getDate().toDateTimeAtStartOfDay().getMillis()) = {java.sql.Date@6082}"2013-09-24"
item.getDate().getLocalMillis() = 1380067200000
new java.sql.Date(item.getDate().getLocalMillis()) = {java.sql.Date@6083}"2013-09-24"
new java.util.Date(item.getDate().getLocalMillis()) = {java.util.Date@6103}"Tue Sep 24 20:00:00 EDT 2013"

From the java.util.Date creation I'm assuming it is because my machine I'm testing on is in EST, and the LocalDate is in UTC, but I'm not sure what the correct way to fix this is. I realize I could get the local timezone and add that to the millis, but that seems like a hacky fix. Is there a proper way to do this that I'm just missing?


Update with the millis for the java.util.Date

new java.util.Date(item.getDate().getLocalMillis()).getTime() = 1380153600000
item.getDate().toDateTimeAtStartOfDay().getMillis() = 1380153600000
item.getDate() = {org.joda.time.LocalDate@5812}"2013-09-26"
new java.sql.Date(item.getDate().getLocalMillis()).getTime() = 1380153600000
new java.util.Date(item.getDate().getLocalMillis()) = {java.util.Date@5842}"Wed Sep 25 20:00:00 EDT 2013"
new java.util.Date(item.getDate().getLocalMillis()).getTime() = 1380153600000
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  • What's the millisecond value of the sql and util Date objects? Sep 25, 2013 at 21:24

4 Answers 4

12

The proper conversions are:

    public static final DateTimeZone jodaTzUTC = DateTimeZone.forID("UTC");

    // from  java.sql.Date  to LocalDate:
    public static LocalDate dateToLocalDate(java.sql.Date d) {
        if(d==null) return null;
        return new LocalDate(d.getTime(), jodaTzUTC);
    }

    // from  LocalDate to java.sql.Date:
    public static java.sql.Date localdateToDate(LocalDate ld) {
        if(ld==null) return null;
        return new java.sql.Date(
             ld.toDateTimeAtStartOfDay(jodaTzUTC).getMillis());
    }

I use this in my DAO helper logic. In JDBC you should do

 public static final Calendar calendarUTC = Calendar.getInstance(
       TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC"));

 d = rs.getDate(i, calendarUTC);

And the same for the setter.

4

Let's you have joda's local date

LocalDate loc = //...  

You can conver it to java.sql.Date with independence of zone, in next ways:

Date date = new Date(loc .getYear() - 1900, loc .getMonthOfYear() - 1, loc .getDayOfMonth());

or

Date date = Date.valueOf(l.toString());
1
  • This constructor is deprecated Oct 31, 2017 at 9:40
-2

You should create and use a java.sql.Timestamp, not a java.sql.Date. By spec, the java.sql.Date has no time element.

To convert LocalDate to Timestamp:

Timestamp timestamp = new Timestamp(localDate.toDateMidnight().getMillis());

To convert LocalDateTime to Timestamp:

Timestamp timestamp = new Timestamp(localDateTime.toDateTime().getMillis());
2
  • 2
    I don't need a timestamp I need a date, I'm storing a date in the database.
    – Zipper
    Sep 26, 2013 at 1:03
  • LocalDate has no time element as well, just like java.sql.Date
    – Tristan
    Apr 27, 2015 at 12:43
-3

If you found this question by searching how to convert Java 8 LocalDate, here is how you do it:

public static Date valueOf(LocalDate date)

Obtains an instance of Date from a LocalDate object with the same year, month and day of month value as the given LocalDate. The provided LocalDate is interpreted as the local date in the local time zone. Parameters:date - a LocalDate to convertReturns:a Date objectThrows:NullPointerException - if date is nullSince:1.8

example:

Date sqlDate = Date.valueOf(localDateObject);
1
  • 4
    This confuses Joda LocalDate with Java 8 LocalDate. The question is about Joda LocalDate.
    – oulenz
    Sep 7, 2016 at 11:54

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