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https://jira.jboss.org/jira/browse/RF-8163?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12517771#action_12517771
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Thomas Morper commented on RF-8163:
-----------------------------------

I can still reproduce the bug with 3.3.3 CR1.

I do the following steps: 
Open a dialog that creates a new object at our software. The User has the 
possibility to enter some event dates at this point. Now I use my keyboard and 
enter 1.1.1 1:1 (dd.MM.yy HH:mm) to the first event date. When I press the save 
button, the save operation fails as MS SQL can not handle the resulting 
JulianCalendar. I will attach a screenshot of the eclipse debugger soon.

What's strange: After the save operation has failed, the user gets an error 
message on the dialog. Pressing save now again WITHOUT changing ANYTHING on the 
input fields results in an GregorianCalendar and everything works. But it sucks 
the user always getting the error message...

> rich:calendar switching between JulianCalendar and Gregorian
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: RF-8163
>                 URL: https://jira.jboss.org/jira/browse/RF-8163
>             Project: RichFaces
>          Issue Type: Bug
>      Security Level: Public(Everyone can see) 
>          Components: component-input
>    Affects Versions: 3.3.2.CR1, 3.3.2.GA
>         Environment: Windows (several versions), Tomcat 6.0.18, MS IE 8 or 
> Firefox 3.0.
>            Reporter: Thomas Morper
>            Assignee: Andrey Markhel
>             Fix For: 3.3.3.Final
>
>         Attachments: screenshot-1.jpg
>
>
> We have several rich:calendar elements at our application with date format 
> dd-mm-yy hh:mm. We now hve the following problem: When a user types in a date 
> without using the calendar-popup and uses a single-number year without a 
> leading zero (e. g. 12.12.1 12:12), the calendar accepts the input (correct), 
> but it creates a JulianCalendar for the Date cariable at the according bean, 
> while it creates a GregorianCalendar for 12.12.01 12:12 or any other input 
> with two digits for the year.

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