Thanks so much Adrian for your comment.
Are you recommending to look into the classes present inside
"conversion" package(org.ofbiz.base.conversion)? This is what I am
assuming at the moment - Please confirm!

--
Ashish

On Fri, Sep 17, 2010 at 8:35 PM, Adrian Crum <[email protected]> wrote:
> A quick reminder to the rest of the community: UtilDateTime methods that
> perform millisecond arithmetic should not be used.
>
> -Adrian
>
> On 9/17/2010 3:40 AM, [email protected] wrote:
>>
>> Author: ashish
>> Date: Fri Sep 17 10:40:20 2010
>> New Revision: 998061
>>
>> URL: http://svn.apache.org/viewvc?rev=998061&view=rev
>> Log:
>> Correcting the condition. Thanks Akash for the contribution.
>>
>> Modified:
>>     ofbiz/trunk/framework/base/src/org/ofbiz/base/util/UtilDateTime.java
>>
>> Modified:
>> ofbiz/trunk/framework/base/src/org/ofbiz/base/util/UtilDateTime.java
>> URL:
>> http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/ofbiz/trunk/framework/base/src/org/ofbiz/base/util/UtilDateTime.java?rev=998061&r1=998060&r2=998061&view=diff
>>
>> ==============================================================================
>> --- ofbiz/trunk/framework/base/src/org/ofbiz/base/util/UtilDateTime.java
>> (original)
>> +++ ofbiz/trunk/framework/base/src/org/ofbiz/base/util/UtilDateTime.java
>> Fri Sep 17 10:40:20 2010
>> @@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ public class UtilDateTime {
>>      }
>>
>>      public static int getIntervalInDays(Timestamp from, Timestamp thru) {
>> -        return thru != null ? (int) (thru.getTime() - from.getTime()) /
>> (24*60*60*1000) : 0;
>> +        return thru != null ? (int) ((thru.getTime() - from.getTime()) /
>> (24*60*60*1000)) : 0;
>>      }
>>
>>      public static Timestamp addDaysToTimestamp(Timestamp start, int days)
>> {
>>
>>
>>
>

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