Java tutorial
package com.jason.sms.util; /* * Copyright 2002-2012 the original author or authors. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ import java.beans.PropertyEditorSupport; import java.text.DateFormat; import java.text.ParseException; import java.sql.Date; import org.springframework.util.StringUtils; public class CustomSqlDateEditor extends PropertyEditorSupport { private final DateFormat dateFormat; private final boolean allowEmpty; private final int exactDateLength; /** * Create a new CustomDateEditor instance, using the given DateFormat * for parsing and rendering. * <p>The "allowEmpty" parameter states if an empty String should * be allowed for parsing, i.e. get interpreted as null value. * Otherwise, an IllegalArgumentException gets thrown in that case. * @param dateFormat DateFormat to use for parsing and rendering * @param allowEmpty if empty strings should be allowed */ public CustomSqlDateEditor(DateFormat dateFormat, boolean allowEmpty) { this.dateFormat = dateFormat; this.allowEmpty = allowEmpty; this.exactDateLength = -1; } /** * Create a new CustomDateEditor instance, using the given DateFormat * for parsing and rendering. * <p>The "allowEmpty" parameter states if an empty String should * be allowed for parsing, i.e. get interpreted as null value. * Otherwise, an IllegalArgumentException gets thrown in that case. * <p>The "exactDateLength" parameter states that IllegalArgumentException gets * thrown if the String does not exactly match the length specified. This is useful * because SimpleDateFormat does not enforce strict parsing of the year part, * not even with {@code setLenient(false)}. Without an "exactDateLength" * specified, the "01/01/05" would get parsed to "01/01/0005". However, even * with an "exactDateLength" specified, prepended zeros in the day or month * part may still allow for a shorter year part, so consider this as just * one more assertion that gets you closer to the intended date format. * @param dateFormat DateFormat to use for parsing and rendering * @param allowEmpty if empty strings should be allowed * @param exactDateLength the exact expected length of the date String */ public CustomSqlDateEditor(DateFormat dateFormat, boolean allowEmpty, int exactDateLength) { this.dateFormat = dateFormat; this.allowEmpty = allowEmpty; this.exactDateLength = exactDateLength; } /** * Parse the Date from the given text, using the specified DateFormat. */ @Override public void setAsText(String text) throws IllegalArgumentException { if (this.allowEmpty && !StringUtils.hasText(text)) { // Treat empty String as null value. setValue(null); } else if (text != null && this.exactDateLength >= 0 && text.length() != this.exactDateLength) { throw new IllegalArgumentException( "Could not parse date: it is not exactly" + this.exactDateLength + "characters long"); } else { try { java.util.Date date = this.dateFormat.parse(text); java.sql.Date sqlDate = new java.sql.Date(date.getTime()); setValue(sqlDate); } catch (ParseException ex) { throw new IllegalArgumentException("Could not parse date: " + ex.getMessage(), ex); } } } /** * Format the Date as String, using the specified DateFormat. */ @Override public String getAsText() { Date value = (Date) getValue(); return (value != null ? this.dateFormat.format(value) : ""); } }