10

I have a date in ISO 8601 date format 2015-09-08T01:55:28Z. I used this code to convert the ISO 8601 fate to a Calendar object:

Calendar cal = javax.xml.bind.DatatypeConverter.parseDateTime("2015-09-08T01:55:28Z");

and now I need to use the cal.getTime() to get my time, but I need to convert it to a java.sql.Timestamp. I tried to do this:

final Timestamp finalDate = (Timestamp) cal.getTime();

but I got this error:

java.lang.ClassCastException: java.util.Date cannot be cast to java.sql.Timestamp

Ideas?

2
  • 2
    new java.sql.Timestamp(cal.getTime().getTime())
    – Tunaki
    Sep 8, 2015 at 15:09
  • bingo! worked! thank you man! you should make this an answer so I can up vote you, Sep 8, 2015 at 15:15

2 Answers 2

21

As the exception says: Calendar::getTime() returns a java.util.Date object, not a java.sql.Timestamp object. So you cannot cast it to a Timestamp object.

Use:

Timestamp timestamp = new Timestamp(cal.getTimeInMillis());

And also consider to replace Calendar with the new Date & Time API introduced in Java SE 8.

6

The Answer by Puce is correct.

java.time

The modern way in Java 8 and later is to use the new java.time framework. These new classes supplant the old java.util.Date/.Calendar that have proven to be confusing and troublesome.

An Instant is a moment on the timeline, a count of nanoseconds from first moment of 1970 in UTC. The class is able to parse strings such as yours that comply with the ISO 8601 format.

String input  = "2015-09-08T01:55:28Z";
Instant instant = Instant.parse( input );

Database via old java.sql types

From an Instant, we can get a java.sql.Timestamp by calling the from method newly added to this old class.

java.sql.Timestamp ts = java.sql.Timestamp.from( instant );

We could combine all three lines into a one-liner, not that I recommend it (makes debugging more difficult).

 java.sql.Timestamp ts = Timestamp.from( Instant.parse( "2015-09-08T01:55:28Z" ) );

Database via java.time types

As of JDBC 4.2, a compliant JDBC driver should be able to pass the java.time types via getObject and setObject on a PreparedStatement. If your driver does not, use the conversion methods for the old classes.

myPreparedStatement.setObject( 1 , instant );

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.