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I have a Java application that is running embedded groovy scripts using a GroovyClassLoader. Everything is working great until I hit an odd error while passing Java types to a Groovy script.

My issue is thus: I am passing a java.util.Date as a parameter into a groovy script. I found that Groovy's java.util.Date has a fantastic clearTime() function. However when I try to call this function i get this exception:

groovy.lang.MissingMethodException: No signature of method: java.util.Date.clearTime() is applicable for argument types: () values: []

I assume this because I have a Java Date and not a Groovy Date. Is there a way to convert between the two.

I do admit I don't fully understand how Groovy seems to be overriding jdk types. (So much so I don't even know if this is the correct terminology to use here.) Please correct me if I am completely wrong about what happens when you create a java.util.Date inside of Groovy vs. when you pass one in to a function from Java.

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  • Also, in this case I am considering scrapping passing java dates around and switching to Joda. However I would like to know what in the world Groovy is doing when Java types are passed to it. I am sure I will run to this problem again sooner or later. Mar 20, 2012 at 18:33
  • I am not going to bother submitting this as an answer, but my hack-and-slash fix for this is to use the Java GregorianCalendar and use its set() to set the date into it then blank out all the fields I don't like. Mar 20, 2012 at 18:59
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    Can you post an example of this failing? There is no "Groovy date"as such, it's a regular date with a metaclass that is looked up by groovy whilst executing your groovy code.
    – tim_yates
    Mar 20, 2012 at 19:05
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    So long as it is being executed by groovy, it should work... Hence my request for a minimal failing example...
    – tim_yates
    Mar 20, 2012 at 20:01
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    can you please post your solution as answer or delete your question? This will remove this question form the list of unanswered ones...
    – rdmueller
    Apr 10, 2012 at 8:43

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Ok I found out my malfunction here. My test app was bound to groovy 1.8.6 as desired, but my main program was using 1.6.5 (the function I happened to be trying to call was introduced in 1.6.7). Eclipse decided not to run with the new version when I updated my pom.xml.

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