views:

42

answers:

2

I am losing precision in my ResultSet.getDate(x) calls. Basically:

rs = ps.executeQuery();
rs.getDate("MODIFIED");

is returning dates truncated to the day where MODIFIED is an Oracle TIMESTAMP field of default precision. I think there may be some JDBC tweak I'm missing; usually TIMESTAMP is compatible with DATE, but I'm hoping I don't have to redefine the entire table.

+1  A: 

You should use java.sql.Timestamp instead of java.sql.Date. You can use it as a java.util.Date object afterward if necessary.

rs = ps.executeQuery();
Timestamp timestamp = rs.getTimestamp("MODIFIED");

Hope this helps.

dpatch
Constructing `new Date` is unnecessary since `Timestamp extends Date`.
BalusC
+7  A: 

ResultSet.getDate() returns a java.sql.Date, not a java.util.Date. It is defined to be a timeless date. If you want a timestamp, use ResultSet.getTimestamp()!

Affe
Note to self - rtfm. I thought this was working in other places.
orbfish