Re: Patched MySQL plugin
Re: Patched MySQL plugin
- Subject: Re: Patched MySQL plugin
- From: Chuck Hill <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2010 20:17:50 -0700
You are not making me hate dates any less. :-)
On Sep 29, 2010, at 8:15 PM, Ken Anderson wrote:
> An NSTimestamp represents a point in time, as has been stated. Making it behave differently is a bad idea.
>
> I have a set of methods that determine today's date in GMT, and store things that are dates that way. I've never had a problem. I pull out the year, month, and day from a timestamp represented in the local timezone, then create a new timestamp with the same year, month, and day with GMT as the timezone. It's always worked for me...
>
> Ken
>
>
>
> On Sep 29, 2010, at 10:44 PM, Chuck Hill wrote:
>
>> Piling on here. As Louis pointed out, "NSTimestamps are points in time". Messing with that in prototypes is a Bad Idea. You will regret. Have you crossed a DST boundary yet in your testing? And making one database behave differently than others seems at least unwise.
>>
>> If you want a calendar date, find a different class. Joda Time and Apache Commons would be a good place to start looking. That would make welcome and very useful contribution to Wonder.
>>
>>
>> Chuck and hating Java and Dates
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sep 29, 2010, at 6:58 PM, Ramsey Lee Gurley wrote:
>>> On Sep 29, 2010, at 9:40 PM, Paul Hoadley wrote:
>>> On 30/09/2010, at 10:21 AM, Louis Demers wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> In my app, when that's the behaviour I want, I zero out the data before writing it to the database so that subsequent checks for equality will return values...
>>>>
>>>> FWIW, I've found that the only clean solution to this problem is to abandon using timestamp types to represent a 1-day-resolution date. In my experience, at least, zeroing out the time part only works until you start using multiple timezones.
>>>
>>> Apple agrees with you Paul.
>>>
>>> http://developer.apple.com/legacy/mac/library/documentation/InternetWeb/Reference/WO542Reference/index.html
>>>
>>> Calendar dates should not be represented by NSTimestamp. The Date prototype is wrong for using it IMHO.
>>>
>>> Ramsey
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>> --
>> Chuck Hill Senior Consultant / VP Development
>>
>> Practical WebObjects - for developers who want to increase their overall knowledge of WebObjects or who are trying to solve specific problems.
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--
Chuck Hill Senior Consultant / VP Development
Practical WebObjects - for developers who want to increase their overall knowledge of WebObjects or who are trying to solve specific problems.
http://www.global-village.net/products/practical_webobjects
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