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Posted to j-dev@xerces.apache.org by "Michael Glavassevich (JIRA)" <xe...@xml.apache.org> on 2006/02/27 06:26:57 UTC

[jira] Updated: (XERCESJ-1097) XMLGregorianCalendarImpl format method generates improperly formatted date string

     [ http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/XERCESJ-1097?page=all ]

Michael Glavassevich updated XERCESJ-1097:
------------------------------------------

    Fix Version: 2.8.0

> XMLGregorianCalendarImpl format method generates improperly formatted date string
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>          Key: XERCESJ-1097
>          URL: http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/XERCESJ-1097
>      Project: Xerces2-J
>         Type: Bug
>   Components: JAXP (javax.xml.datatype)
>     Versions: 2.7.0, 2.7.1
>  Environment: Linux starscream 2.6.12-1.1447_FC4 #1 Fri Aug 26 20:29:51 EDT 2005 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux
> Java(TM) 2 Runtime Environment, Standard Edition (build 1.5.0_04-b05)
>     Reporter: George F. Willard III
>     Assignee: Michael Glavassevich
>      Fix For: 2.8.0

>
> PROBLEM:
> The format method of XMLGregorianCalendarImpl may generate non-RFC3339 compliant strings because the toString method of BigDecimal defaults to using scientific "E-" notation instead of engineering notation.  I encountered this problem when unit testing JAX-WS pre-releases, and recreated it with a simple Calendar echo unit test that fails:
> INPUT TO  echoCalendar WEB SERVICE: 0001-01-01T00:00:00.0000000-05:00
> EXPECTED OUTPUT FROM  echoCalendar WEB SERVICE: 0001-01-01T00:00:00.0000000-05:00
> ACTUAL OUTPUT FROM echoCalendar WEB SERVICE: 0001-01-01T00:00:00E-7-05:00
>   ** Note that the fractionalSeconds were expressed in scientific "E-7" notation instead of engineering notation causing it to be interpreted as invalid by web service clients.
> SUGGESTED FIX:
> FILE: src/org/apache/xerces/jaxp/datatype/XMLGregorianCalendarImpl.java:2960
> CURRENT: String frac = getFractionalSecond().toString(); 
> SUGGESTED: String frac = getFractionalSecond().toPlainString();

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