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I am doing jdbc and calling a procedure with date parameter but my db tables date format is in dd-MMM-yy format hence i converted my string date into dd-MMM-yy format but I am unable to setDate(1,sdt) cuz sdt must be in java.sql.Date type and java.sql.Date format is yyyy-MM-dd hence I need help

My procedure is defined thus:

PROCEDURE pStoreData(d_sumDttm IN DATE, i_Retval out number);

Short Code:

    System.out.print("Enter report date:");
    String sdate = scanner.nextLine();
    final Date date = new Date();
    final SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat();
    format.applyPattern(dd-MMM-yy);
    final String sysdt = format.format(date);
    java.sql.Date sqldt = java.sql.Date.valueOf(sysdt);
    callablestate = connection.prepareCall("{call Report.pStoreDate(?,?)}");
    callablestate.setDate(1,sqldt);
    callablestate.registerOutParameter(2,Types.REF_CURSOR);
    callable.execute();
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  • 2
    The database's date format is irrelevant if you insert using java.sql.Date, so forget all about date formats and insert the date value. The date format only matters if you insert the date value as a String, and I'd strongly discourage you from doing that.
    – Andreas
    Aug 9, 2020 at 19:11
  • 1
  • 2
    @Arhana Did you even look at the very nice answer that shows you need to call setObject() for a LocalDate, not setDate()?
    – Andreas
    Aug 10, 2020 at 0:35
  • 2
    You tried what? You haven't put any code in the question to show what you've tried. But, let me guess, you call LocalDate.parse("10-08-20") even the the documentation of that method specifically says the format must be "2020-10-08", so of course it fails. Why would you expect otherwise?
    – Andreas
    Aug 10, 2020 at 4:17
  • 1
    You’re almost there. callablestatement.setObject(1,ld) should do it (unless there’s something relevant that you haven’t told us).
    – Anonymous
    Aug 10, 2020 at 5:13

1 Answer 1

2

Update

Posting this update since OP seems to be struggling with how to use the original solution.

Dear OP,

Java instantiates date/time/date-time in just one way and then you can format it in your custom way. The database works the same way. So, it doesn't matter what format you display to the user or in what format the user enters the date; once you parse it into date/time/date-time object by applying the corresponding format, you just pass it to Java/DB and Java/DB will take care of the rest.

import java.time.LocalDate;
import java.util.Scanner;

import com.mysql.jdbc.CallableStatement;

public class Main {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Scanner scanner = new Scanner(System.in);
        System.out.print("Enter report date in MM-dd-yyyy format: ");
        String strDate = scanner.nextLine();
        LocalDate localDate = LocalDate.parse(strDate, DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("MM-dd-yyyy"));
        CallableStatement st = conn.prepareCall("{call Report.pStoreDate(?,?)}");
        st.setObject(1, localDate);
        st.registerOutParameter(2, Types.REF_CURSOR);
        st.execute();
    }
}

Original answer:

I suggest you do not use the outdated and error-prone java.util.Date. Use LocalDate instead as shown below:

LocalDate localDate = LocalDate.now();
PreparedStatement st = conn.prepareStatement("INSERT INTO mytable (columnfoo) VALUES (?)");
st.setObject(1, localDate);
st.executeUpdate();
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  • after trying your solution I got java.sql.Exception : Invalid column type
    – Arhana
    Aug 10, 2020 at 3:56
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    This answer has the right idea but seems to be missing the fact that the OP is using a CallableStatement, not a PreparedStatement (which only became clear in the comments long after this answer was posted).
    – Anonymous
    Aug 10, 2020 at 6:44
  • @Arhana We may be able to help you with Invalid column type if you edit your question and give us the definition of your procedure with datatypes of the parameters and also the Java code where you try to apply the solution from this answer.
    – Anonymous
    Aug 10, 2020 at 6:46
  • @Ole V.V, PROCEDURE pStoreData(d_sumDttm IN DATE, i_Retval out number); Short Code: System.out.print("Enter report date:"); String sdate = scanner.nextLine(); final Date date = new Date(); final SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat(); format.applyPattern(dd-MMM-yy); final String sysdt = format.format(date); java.sql.Date sqldt = java.sql.Date.valueOf(sysdt); callablestate = connection.prepareCall("{call Report.pStoreDate(?,?)}"); callablestate.setDate(1,sqldt); callablestate.registerOutParameter(2,Types.REF_CURSOR); callable.execute();
    – Arhana
    Aug 10, 2020 at 19:36
  • Exception is : java.sql.SQLException: Invalid column type
    – Arhana
    Aug 10, 2020 at 19:37

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