It's actually a bug in the javascript. I think the double/long
storing the date in the browser loses precision in certain cases and
when it gets sent to the server the day is getting adjusted
accordingly.
http://code.google.com/p/google-web-toolkit/issues/detail?id=3276
On Apr 22, 2:13 pm, Pa
This is probably happening because the timezone rules are different
between java and the brower. When you send a date, you're sending a
millisecond offset. Also, if the browser is in a different timezone
than the server, you can be a day off your dates if the (hidden) time
is close to midnight.
M
I've run into quite a strange issue serializing dates from the browser
to the server.
When I enter the following dates in the browser I receive for some
dates the wrong value at the server side (using date pattern dd-MM-
):
1-1-1968 -> Mon Jan 01 00:00:00 CET 1968 - correct
1-3-1968 -