23

I am trying to set a timestamp in my database using java, however in my table all I get is the date, and no time (i.e., looks like "2010-09-09 00:00:00").

I am using a datetime field on my mysql database (because it appears that datetime is more common than timestamp). My code to set the date looks like this:

PreparedStatement ps = conn.prepareStatement("INSERT INTO mytable (datetime_field) VALUES (?)")
java.util.Date today = new java.util.Date();
java.sql.Date timestamp = new java.sql.Date(today.getTime());
ps.setDate(1, timestamp);
ps.executeUpdate();

How do I set the date to include the time?

Edit: I changed the code as per below, and it sets both the date and the time.

PreparedStatement ps = conn.prepareStatement("INSERT INTO mytable (datetime_field) VALUES (?)")
java.util.Date today = new java.util.Date();
java.sql.Timestamp timestamp = new java.sql.Timestamp(today.getTime());
ps.setTimestamp(1, timestamp);
ps.executeUpdate();
Community
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Adam Morris
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3 Answers3

28

Use java.sql.Timestamp and setTimestamp(int, Timestamp). java.sql.Date is date-only, regardless of the type of the column it's being stored in.

ColinD
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4

Not exactly sure what you need to use, but

ps.setDate();

expects a column type of Date. So it's normalizing it, removing the time.

Try

ps.setTimetamp();
Brad G
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-4

You could use :

private static String getTimeStamp() {
    SimpleDateFormat f = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");
    return f.format(new Date()); 
}
oyo
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    You shouldn't deal with string formats for dates/times when saving them to or reading them from a database. JDBC's abstractions such as `setTimestamp` and `getTimestamp` are there to make that unnecessary. – ColinD Sep 09 '10 at 14:51