I've confirmed this. I'll add a bug on it and we'll see what's going on.
Derek
On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 6:40 PM, tclendenen wrote:
>
> I overrode the save method of the ToDo class and placed println
> (toString) before and after the getSingleton.save(this) call. Both
> print the correctly forma
I overrode the save method of the ToDo class and placed println
(toString) before and after the getSingleton.save(this) call. Both
print the correctly formatted date, but it still shows up on the page
and in the database as 12:00. I am using the Derby 10.4.2.0
On Mar 23, 6:42 pm, Derek Chen-Bec
Ah, sorry, I misread. The parse should be working fine, then. The
MappdeDateTime really should be saving the full Date instance that's passed
to it, so please let me know if the Date that you're setting as the value is
losing the time info. Also, what DB engine are you running against?
Derek
On M
That would make sense but the format string is "MM/dd/, hh:mm a".
My initial question, although not asked correctly, came from looking
through the code and seeing the DateExtension class in TimeHelpers.
It states "This class adds a noTime method the Date class, in order to
get at Date object s
I think the reason that it's set to midnight is because when the date parser
parses a date with only the MM/dd/ format string, it sets HMS to zeros.
Derek
On Sun, Mar 22, 2009 at 8:52 AM, tclendenen wrote:
>
> Except for the I added to index.html, I believe the
> following are the only cha
Except for the I added to index.html, I believe the
following are the only changes made to the original tutorial code
Additions to TD.scala
val dateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/, hh:mm a")
private def deadline(td: ToDo, reDraw: () => JsCmd) =
swappable({td.deadline},
Can you add some of your code?
How you're using MappedDateTime in your snippet and the definition in
the model would be a good start.
On Mar 21, 9:34 pm, tclendenen wrote:
> As an exercise I've added a deadline object to the ToDo class. It
> works as expected except that the time is always set