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893

answers:

4

A table has timestamp column. A sample value in that could be 2010-03-30 13:42:42. With Hibernate, I am doing a range query Restrictions.between("column-name", fromDate, toDate).

The Hibernate mapping for this column is as follows.

<property name="orderTimestamp"  column="order_timestamp" type="java.util.Date" />

Let's say, I want to find out all the records that have the date 30th March 2010 and 31st March 2010. A range query on this field is done as follows.

Date fromDate = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd").parse("2010-03-30");
Date toDate = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd").parse("2008-03-31");
Expression.between("orderTimestamp", fromDate, toDate);

This doesn't work.

The query is converted to respective timestamps as "2010-03-30 00:00:00" and "2010-03-31 00:00:00". So, all the records for the 31st March 2010 are ignored.

A simple solution to this problem could be to have the end date as "2010-03-31 23:59:59." But, I would like to know if there is way to match only the date part of the timestamp column.

Also, is Expression.between() inclusive of both limits? Documentation doesn't throw any light on this.

A: 

Maybe you can CAST orderTimestamp to a DATE. HQL does have support for this.

Frank Heikens
+1  A: 

The "2010-03-31 23:59:59." border condition is potentially dangerous: if there was a transaction in the system between 23:59:59 and 00:00:00, you'd miss it. If you have enough transactions daily and a long enough period, a report is going to break and you'll spend hours to find out why.

PostgreSQL between includes the limits so it would not even be safe to set the end date to 2010-04-01 00:00:00. Use lt() and gt() to be sure.

Tomislav Nakic-Alfirevic
still that wouldn't fly, that will include 2010-04-01 00:00 AM
Michael Buen
Using lt("endDate", endDate) where endDate = "2010-04-01 00:00" would include records with end date 2010-04-01 00:00? I don't think that is the case.
Tomislav Nakic-Alfirevic
Thanks for link for 'between' being inclusive for PostgreSQL. Boundary conditions is not much of a worry as timestamps are recorded only to the precision of seconds. To use, less-than or greater-than, I need to use less-than("2010-04-01 00:00:00") and greater-than-or-equal-to("2010-03-30 00:00:00")
Shashikant Kore
+2  A: 

, I would like to know if there is way to match only the date part of the timestamp column.

If you don't want a TIMESTAMP, use a DATE (and shouldn't you use type="date"?).

Also, is Expression.between() inclusive of both limits?

It seems that the behavior of the SQL BETWEEN operator is database dependent. With PosgresQL, the BETWEEN expression:

x BETWEEN y AND z

is semantically equivalent to:

y <= x AND x <= z

i.e. inclusive.

Pascal Thivent
type="date" doesn't help. Want to try your earlier idea of annotation, but unfortunately, I'm on Hibernate version older than 3.3 in which annotations were introduced.
Shashikant Kore
@Shashikant I posted my answer a bit too fast, didn't realize you were using xml mappings (hence the update). But indeed, Hibernate annotations has a @Temporal annotation for this (http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/stable/annotations/reference/en/html_single/#d0e342). There must be some kind of equivalent with xml... Do you have control on your physical model BTW?
Pascal Thivent
Except DB schema (ie timstamp column) and Hibernate version, I can change everthing else. Temporal annotation sounds useful but as I mentioned, I can't move to Hibernate 3.3+. Also, if I add Temporal annoation as Date, while retrieving the row, will it truncate timestamp to date? If yes, that is undesirable.Thanks for the help, Pascal. Modding +1.
Shashikant Kore
A: 

Yes, you can use the "CAST" function with hibernate. This article "Extracting only date part of a date time column using JPA/Hibernate" might help you.

James Selvakumar