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http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-2434?page=c...
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Steve Ebersole commented on HHH-2434:
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I'd really prefer a more general solution here along the lines of T-SQL datediff as
opposed to adding a new function definition for each and every date part/field.
For everyone complaining about why this has not been addressed, please realize that
Dialects are intended to be plugged in to be able to allow you to implement such
behavior.
For the person complaining that writing a Dialect is the same as writing custom SQL, well
I guess you are entitled to an opinion. But I totally disagree.
Anyway, the more generic datediff-style solution is a tad more difficult and I am pushing
it to Alpha3 and dropping it from 3.6
No standard way to calculate date intervals in HQL
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Key: HHH-2434
URL:
http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-2434
Project: Hibernate Core
Issue Type: Improvement
Components: core
Affects Versions: 3.2.0.ga
Environment: All
Reporter: Don Smith
Assignee: Steve Ebersole
Priority: Minor
Fix For: 4.0.0.Alpha3
Attachments: HHH-2434.patch, hsqldb-stack.txt, IntervalTracker.java,
postgresql-stack.txt
Date interval calculation is supported differently on different database platforms. Some
allow direct arithmetic on columns, i.e. enddate - startdate. Some require functions,
datediff(), timestampdiff(), etc. This causes cross-platform issues. For instance, an
application I work on has to figure out the dialect that's in use (out of the four we
currently support) and create the HQL string differently for each platform. This is
undesirable, since we use Hibernate to enable platform neutrality; our installer asks
which database the customer wants to deploy to, and sets the dialect. We'd like our
codebase to be free of dialect-specific code.
I propose a standard solution for this, either direct date arithmetic, or a function
defintion that is ported across dialects. Timestampdiff seems to be a fairly standard
function, although DB2 has different syntax than MySQL and Derby. I've seen hints that
timestampdiff is part of the ANSI SQL standard, but do not have access to the documents to
determine if that is the case.
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