Usually you should not need to obtain the timestamp. What do you need it for? Remember you can always use temporal operators directly on events, no need to access the timestamp. Example:

$that : Event1(
Event2( this after $that )

   Edson

2011/2/7 Wolfgang Laun <wolfgang.laun@gmail.com>
An insert call returns a fact handle . If this is of the class
org.drools.common.EventFactHandle you can call getStartTimestamp() and
other getters.

This is not part of the stable API.

.W

On 7 February 2011 15:10, OlliSee <o.roess@seeburger.de> wrote:
>
> Yeah..the topic subject explains itself, I presume :)
> --
> View this message in context: http://drools-java-rules-engine.46999.n3.nabble.com/How-to-obtain-the-timestamp-of-an-event-if-I-don-t-use-an-timestamp-attribute-tp2443366p2443366.html
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  Edson Tirelli
  JBoss Drools Core Development
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