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I have an application where I'm using ps.set... to set the parameters for a prepared statement. I have had a hard time getting the correct of calls for storing java Date objects where I have both a time and date (and don't mention Calendar in this whole mess). What I have found is that if I use a java.util.Date with ps.setObject, it does the right thing and is much less confusing. In fact, I have found that if I want to set an int or String or BigDecimal, setObject does the right thing for them as well. So, my questions are: is this a bad practice (if so, is it a theoretical bad thing or a practical bad thing) and is there a significant performance hit for doing it this way?

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It depends on the driver implementation, some drivers wrap all their set methods around setObject so setObject does less work. However I would normally expect setDate to do less work than setObject.

However if setObject is doing what you want then use it. If you have performance issues with databases then swapping setObject with setDate will only fix them if the type was an issue.

For instance recently I had a problem with the database wanting me to use setDate instead of setTimestamp. This made a 200ms query take 250 seconds to complete. Swapping setObject for setDate will add less than 1ms to your query.

Where setDate has a definite benefit over setObject. Is readability the code is saying I need a Date here rather than saying anything is good.

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