javatimestampsimpledateformatjava.util.datejava.util.calendar

Parsing HTML date input into Timestamp in Java Servlet


Recently I'm having a problem with Timestamp and HTML input type Date:

This is my HTML/JSP:

<div class="form-group">
   <label>Your day of birth</label>
   <input class="form-control form-control-lg" type="date" name="txtBirthdate" required="">
</div>

This is my Java Servlet:

String birth = request.getParameter(Constants.BIRTHDATE_TXT);
System.out.println(birth);
Timestamp bDate = new Timestamp(((new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss").parse(birth)).getTime()));
System.out.println(bDate);
Timestamp joinDate = new Timestamp(Calendar.getInstance().getTime().getTime());

I cannot parsing the String birth into Timestamp, are there any ways for converting it? And also am I right when you pare the yyyy-MM-dd string using the SimpleDateFormat, it will set the HH:mm:ss part with default value is 00:00:0000?

Thank you for your help


Solution

  • The date-time API of java.util and their formatting API, SimpleDateFormat are outdated and error-prone. Note that java.sql.Timestamp has inherited the same drawbacks as it extends java.util.Date. It is recommended to stop using them completely and switch to the modern date-time API. For any reason, if you have to stick to Java 6 or Java 7, you can use ThreeTen-Backport which backports most of the java.time functionality to Java 6 & 7. If you are working for an Android project and your Android API level is still not compliant with Java-8, check Java 8+ APIs available through desugaring and How to use ThreeTenABP in Android Project.

    You have mentioned,

    My problem is I don't really know how to parse date like example: "2020-12-28" into Timestamp

    You have also mentioned,

    And also am I right when you pare the yyyy-MM-dd string using the SimpleDateFormat, it will set the HH:mm:ss part with default value is 00:00:0000?

    From these two requirements, I infer that you need a date e.g. 2020-12-28 combined with the time e.g. 00:00:00 which is nothing but the start of the day. java.time provides a clean API, LocalDate#atStartOfDay to achieve this.

    Demo:

    import java.time.LocalDate;
    import java.time.LocalDateTime;
    import java.time.ZoneId;
    import java.time.ZonedDateTime;
    import java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter;
    import java.util.Locale;
    
    public class Main {
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            String strDate = "2020-12-28";
    
            // Parse the given date string into LocalDate. Note that you do not need a
            // DateTimeFormatter to parse it as it is already in ISO 8601 format
            LocalDate date = LocalDate.parse(strDate);
    
            // Note: In the following line, replace ZoneId.systemDefault() with the required
            // Zone ID which specified in the format, Continent/City e.g.
            // ZoneId.of("Europe/London")
            ZonedDateTime zdt = date.atStartOfDay(ZoneId.systemDefault());
    
            // Print the default format i.e. the value of zdt#toString. Note that the
            // default format omits seconds and next smaller units if seconds part is zero
            System.out.println(zdt);
    
            // Get and print just the date-time without timezone information
            LocalDateTime ldt = zdt.toLocalDateTime();
            System.out.println(ldt);
    
            // Get and print zdt in a custom format
            DateTimeFormatter dtf = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("uuuu-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS", Locale.ENGLISH);
            String formatted = zdt.format(dtf);
            System.out.println(formatted);
        }
    }
    

    Output:

    2020-12-28T00:00Z[Europe/London]
    2020-12-28T00:00
    2020-12-28T00:00:00.000
    

    Learn about the modern date-time API from Trail: Date Time.