> What would you do though in case of the following: > > @DateBridge > LocalDate myDate; > > encoding() defaults to NUMERIC, so would you a) raise an error, or b) ignore encoding() for LocalDate and friends? Both seem not right to me. I think there is nothing wrong with using NUMERIC encoding per-se for these types. We may recommend STRING but if NUMERIC really is what a user wants I would let them do so.
+1 > What do you suggest we do if a user maps the following? > @DateBridge(resolution=MILLISECOND) > LocalDate birthday; Nothing really, I would just consider a LocalDate the same as a LocalDateTime with time 00:00:000 (UTC time zone) It is equivalent to: LocalDateTime dateTime = date.atStartOfDay( ZoneOffset.UTC ); On Wed, Aug 5, 2015 at 3:24 PM, Gunnar Morling <gun...@hibernate.org> wrote: > > > 2015-08-05 12:41 GMT+02:00 Sanne Grinovero <sa...@hibernate.org>: > >> Our current implementation converts Date in the long "distance from >> epoch" to allow correct range-queries treating each Date as an instant >> in time - allowing a universal sorting strategy. But a LocalDate is >> not an instant-in-time. >> >> A LocalDate is intentionally oblivious of the timezone; as the javadoc >> states, it's useful for birthdays, i.e. symbolic occurrences and >> potentially legal matters which don't fit into a universal sorting >> model but rather with the local political scene - we would need the >> combo {LocalDate, ZoneId} provided to be able to allow sorting across >> different LocalDate - or simply assume that they are all referring to >> the same Zone. >> > > Right, I had the latter in mind and would use UTC for that purpose. > >> >> I think that if the user is using a LocalDate type, he's implicitly >> hinting that the timezone is not relevant for the practical use >> (possibly even wrong); the most faithful representation would be the >> string form in ISO standard format or to encode the day,month,year as >> independent fields? This last detail depends on how it would be more >> efficient to store & query; probably the String format YYYYMMDD would >> be the most efficient internal representation to allow also correct >> sorting. >> >> I wouldn't use NumericField(s) in this case, as they are more >> effective only with larger ranges, while MM and DD are very short; not >> sure if it's worth splitting the year as a NumericField either, as the >> values will likely be strongly clustered in the same range of "recent >> years" - although that might depend on the application but it doesn't >> seem worth the complexity, so I'd index & store as a String YYYYMMDD. >> > > Agreed that this makes most sense, given the "symbolic" nature of > LocalDate. > > What would you do though in case of the following: > > @DateBridge > LocalDate myDate; > > encoding() defaults to NUMERIC, so would you a) raise an error, or b) > ignore encoding() for LocalDate and friends? Both seem not right to me. I > think there is nothing wrong with using NUMERIC encoding per-se for these > types. We may recommend STRING but if NUMERIC really is what a user wants I > would let them do so. > >> >> -- Sanne >> >> >> On 5 August 2015 at 11:10, Gunnar Morling <gun...@hibernate.org> wrote: >> > Hi, >> > >> > What's the motivation for using a different representation in that case? >> > >> > For the sake of consistency, I'd use milli seconds since 1970-01-01 >> across >> > the board. Otherwise it'll be more difficult to compare fields created >> from >> > properties of different date types. >> > >> > --Gunnar >> > >> > >> > 2015-08-04 19:49 GMT+02:00 Davide D'Alto <dav...@hibernate.org>: >> > >> >> Hi, >> >> I started to work on the creation of the bridges for the classes in the >> >> java.time package. >> >> >> >> I was wondering if we want to convert the values to long using the >> existing >> >> approach we have now for java.util.Date. >> >> >> >> In Hibernate Search a java.util.Date is converted into a long that >> >> represents the number of milliseconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00:00 >> GMT >> >> using getTime(). >> >> >> >> The same value can be obtain from a java.time.LocaDate via: >> >> >> >> long epochMilli = date.atStartOfDay( ZoneOffset.UTC >> >> ).toInstant().toEpochMilli(); >> >> >> >> LocalDate has a method that returns the same value expressed in number >> of >> >> days: >> >> >> >> long epochDay = date.toEpochDay(); >> >> >> >> >> >> I would use the second approach >> >> >> >> Davide >> >> _______________________________________________ >> >> hibernate-dev mailing list >> >> hibernate-dev@lists.jboss.org >> >> https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev >> >> >> > _______________________________________________ >> > hibernate-dev mailing list >> > hibernate-dev@lists.jboss.org >> > https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev >> > > _______________________________________________ hibernate-dev mailing list hibernate-dev@lists.jboss.org https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev