Indeed.  The alternative of sending all date operations to the server
is ... incredibly inconvenient at best.

-Ben

On Feb 3, 7:20 am, Jeff Schwartz <[email protected]> wrote:
> I think you will find that you are not alone in your opinion regarding using
> deprecated methods and that you are in fact in good company.
>
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 3, 2011 at 7:35 AM, kkpirri <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Thank you! JsDate worked perfectly.
>
> > Maybe I am too picky but I don't like using deprecated methods and
> > neither suppress warning tags.
>
> > Thank you.
>
> > On 3 feb, 10:17, Thomas Broyer <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > If you want "JVM forwards compatibility", then use Calendar.
> > > If you want "GWT compatibility", then use java.util.Date and ignore the
> > > warnings: your code doesn't run in a JVM, what matters is what GWT
> > > understands. You can alternatively use JsDate<
> >http://google-web-toolkit.googlecode.com/svn/javadoc/2.1/com/google/g...>
> > > .
> > > If you want both, then you can use JodaTime (there's a GWT-compatible
> > port).
>
> > > But honestly, do you really think java.util.Date will go away before you
> > do
> > > some maintenance work on your app?
>
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> --
> *Jeff Schwartz*

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