I am trying to insert java.util.Date
after converting it to java.sql.Timestamp and I am using the following snippet:
java.util.Date utilDate = new java.util.Date();
java.sql.Timestamp sq = new java.sql.Timestamp(utilDate.getTime());
But this is giving me sq
as 2014-04-04 13:30:17.533
Is there any way to get the output without milliseconds?
You can cut off the milliseconds using a Calendar
:
java.util.Date utilDate = new java.util.Date();
Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance();
cal.setTime(utilDate);
cal.set(Calendar.MILLISECOND, 0);
System.out.println(new java.sql.Timestamp(utilDate.getTime()));
System.out.println(new java.sql.Timestamp(cal.getTimeInMillis()));
Output:
2014-04-04 10:10:17.78
2014-04-04 10:10:17.0
Take a look at SimpleDateFormat
:
java.util.Date utilDate = new java.util.Date();
java.sql.Timestamp sq = new java.sql.Timestamp(utilDate.getTime());
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("dd.MM.yyyy HH:mm:ss");
System.out.println(sdf.format(sq));
The problem is with the way you are printing the Time data
java.util.Date utilDate = new java.util.Date();
java.sql.Timestamp sq = new java.sql.Timestamp(utilDate.getTime());
System.out.println(sa); //this will print the milliseconds as the toString() has been written in that format
SimpleDateFormat sdf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
System.out.println(sdf.format(timestamp)); //this will print without ms
Miron Balcerzak
I suggest using DateUtils from apache.commons library.
long millis = DateUtils.truncate(utilDate, Calendar.MILLISECOND).getTime();
java.sql.Timestamp sq = new java.sql.Timestamp(millis );
Edit: Fixed Calendar.MILISECOND
to Calendar.MILLISECOND
java.util.Date utilDate = new java.util.Date();
java.sql.Date sqlDate = new java.sql.Date(utilDate.getTime());
System.out.println("utilDate:" + utilDate);
System.out.println("sqlDate:" + sqlDate);
This gives me the following output:
utilDate:Fri Apr 04 12:07:37 MSK 2014
sqlDate:2014-04-04
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22856931/converting-java-date-to-sql-timestamp