116

Can any body tell me how can I store Java Date to Mysql datetime...?

When I am trying to do so...only date is stored and time remain 00:00:00 in Mysql date stores like this...

2009-09-22 00:00:00

I want not only date but also time...like

2009-09-22 08:08:11

I am using JPA(Hibernate) with spring mydomain classes uses java.util.Date but i have created tables using handwritten queries...

this is my create statement

CREATE TABLE ContactUs (
  id BIGINT AUTO_INCREMENT, 
  userName VARCHAR(30), 
  email VARCHAR(50),
  subject VARCHAR(100), 
  message VARCHAR(1024), 
  messageType VARCHAR(15), 
  contactUsTime DATETIME,
  PRIMARY KEY(id)
);
5
  • pieces of your code, perhaps?
    – Bozho
    Mar 8, 2010 at 11:39
  • 1
    link : coderanch.com/t/304851/JDBC/java/…
    – Haim Evgi
    Mar 8, 2010 at 11:39
  • 2
    These days you should no longer be using java.util.Date at all (in 2010 there probably was no better choice). Better to use the modern classes, like java.time.Instant or java.time.LocalDateTime, depending on the exact requirements for the date-time you need to store.
    – Anonymous
    Aug 13, 2017 at 6:26
  • Some of these old answers comeup pretty high on Google rankings. In Java 8+ we can simply use LocalDateTime to save datetime instead of resorting to using @Temporal to save in datetime format
    – HopeKing
    Aug 31, 2017 at 3:32
  • preparedStatement.setTimestamp(1, new Timestamp(System.currentTimeMillis()));
    – Rajat
    Dec 12, 2018 at 5:58

13 Answers 13

170

see in the link :

http://www.coderanch.com/t/304851/JDBC/java/Java-date-MySQL-date-conversion

The following code just solved the problem:

java.util.Date dt = new java.util.Date();

java.text.SimpleDateFormat sdf = 
     new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");

String currentTime = sdf.format(dt);

This 'currentTime' was inserted into the column whose type was DateTime and it was successful.

2
  • 6
    but,currentTime is a String object, and in db we take datetime as datatype,i think it is not going to be inserted.right?
    – reddy
    May 8, 2014 at 11:44
  • yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss is very important. Take note of the capitalization.
    – biniam
    Dec 31, 2015 at 15:34
98

Annotate your field (or getter) with @Temporal(TemporalType.TIMESTAMP), like this:

public class MyEntity {
    ...
    @Temporal(TemporalType.TIMESTAMP)
    private java.util.Date myDate;
    ...
}

That should do the trick.

3
  • 2
    This is the answer indeed!
    – Perneel
    Jul 9, 2013 at 9:00
  • 2
    up for this, this is the proper answer.
    – Ryan
    Nov 18, 2014 at 8:00
  • 4
    be aware that if you choose this solution, your date will appear as a timestamp when fetched from db. It won't have the nice formatting 'yyyy-MM-dd....')
    – jon
    Aug 5, 2016 at 18:52
38

Are you perhaps using java.sql.Date? While that has millisecond granularity as a Java class (it is a subclass of java.util.Date, bad design decision), it will be interpreted by the JDBC driver as a date without a time component. You have to use java.sql.Timestamp instead.

2
  • 1
    I wouldn't use java.sql.Date or java.sql.Timestamp in domain classes but I guess this was written before the edit of the OP. Mar 9, 2010 at 16:38
  • I would. java.util.Date objects don't compare to java.sql.Timestamp objects with entirely predictable results. Aug 5, 2011 at 21:28
7

Probably because your java date has a different format from mysql format (YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS)

do this

 DateFormat dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss");
 Date date = new Date();
 System.out.println(dateFormat.format(date));
1
  • You mentioned the correct format in the reference and then used the wrong format in the code. Jan 14, 2020 at 15:02
6

you will get 2011-07-18 + time format

long timeNow = Calendar.getInstance().getTimeInMillis();
java.sql.Timestamp ts = new java.sql.Timestamp(timeNow);
...
preparedStatement.setTimestamp(TIME_COL_INDEX, ts);
5

mysql datetime -> GregorianCalendar

SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
Date date = format.parse("2012-12-13 14:54:30"); // mysql datetime format
GregorianCalendar calendar = new GregorianCalendar();
calendar.setTime(date);
System.out.println(calendar.getTime());

GregorianCalendar -> mysql datetime

SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
String string = format.format(calendar.getTime());
System.out.println(string);
4
java.util.Date date = new Date();
Object param = new java.sql.Timestamp(date.getTime());    
preparedStatement.setObject(param);
0
1

Use the following code to insert the date into MySQL. Instead of changing our date's format to meet MySql's requirement, we can help data base to recognize our date by setting the STR_TO_DATE(?, '%l:%i %p') parameters.

For example, 2014-03-12 can be represented as STR_TO_DATE('2014-03-12', '%Y-%m-%d')

preparedStatement = connect.prepareStatement("INSERT INTO test.msft VALUES (default, STR_TO_DATE( ?, '%m/%d/%Y'), STR_TO_DATE(?, '%l:%i %p'),?,?,?,?,?)"); 
1

Its very simple though conditions in this answer are in mysql the column datatype is datetime and you want to send data from java code to mysql:

java.util.Date dt = new java.util.Date();
whatever your code object may be.setDateTime(dt);

important thing is just pick the date and its format is already as per mysql format and send it, no further modifications required.

1

If using java 8 or higher , try to use LocalDateTime. That was the correct type if you are using DATETIME as mysql data type.

Below is example for conver current time to "2009-09-22 08:08:11" format

LocalDateTime currentTime = LocalDateTime.parse(LocalDateTime.now().toString(), DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"));
0

Actually you may not use SimpleDateFormat, you can use something like this;

  @JsonSerialize(using=JsonDateSerializer.class)
  @JsonFormat(shape = JsonFormat.Shape.STRING, pattern = "dd/MM/yyyy HH:mm:ss")
  private Date blkDate;

This way you can directly get the date with format as specified.

0

I still prefer the method in one line

new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss").format(Calendar.getInstance().getTime())
-2

it works for me !!

in mysql table

DATETIME

in entity:

private Date startDate;

in process:

objectEntity.setStartDate(new Date());

in preparedStatement:

pstm.setDate(9, new java.sql.Date(objEntity.getStartDate().getTime()));

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