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 );
new java.sql.Timestamp(cal.getTime().getTime())