Hey Riaan,

Could you post the code to manually format the date? I can easily
compare that to what is being done by the JSTL implementation and give
you some feedback on that.

Grtz,

Martin

PS Thanks for hosting your application in our fine little country:)

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Riaan Oberholzer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: dinsdag 24 februari 2004 22:18
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: JSTL <fmt:formatDate bug ???
> 
> 
> I have an application that runs in The Netherlands,
> but is operated from England. Date/times are thus
> stored and converted with a dateformatter set with the
> Timezone "Europe/London". It looks fine. Ie, I enter a
> time as "15:00" (UK time) and in the database it shows
> "16:00" (Dutch time) which is expected. Reading and
> displaying it back also works, EXCEPT when I use JSTL
> and 
> 
> <fmt:formatDate timeZone="Europe/London" ...
> 
> When daylight savings kick in (start of April I
> think), the times are showed 1 our behind when
> displaying it with JSTL. When formatting it manually
> with my dateformmater, it is correct again. Ie, I
> enter a time as "15:00", it shows in the DB as
> "16:00", but JSTL shows it as "14:00". Formatting
> 'manually' shows the correct 15:00 time.
> 
> Is this a bug? Or is there something else I need to do
> to get this right?
> 
> Thanks
> 
> __________________________________
> Do you Yahoo!?
> Yahoo! Mail SpamGuard - Read only the mail you want. 
http://antispam.yahoo.com/tools

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to