PreparedStatement.setDate(1,java.sql.Date x) problem

I am using Sun JDBC-ODBC bridge to access MS SQL Server 2000. I have following statement:
java.util.Date date = new java.util.Date();
java.sql.Date expire_date = new java.sql.Date(date.getTime());
PreparedStatement pstat = con.prepareStatement("update account set expire_date=? where userid=?");
pstat.setDate(1,expire_date);
pstat.setString(2,userid);
When I ran the program, I got a SQLException error as
java.sql.SQLException: [Microsoft][ODBC SQL Server Driver]Optional features not implemented.
I have traced the problem happened in the statement pstat.setDate(1,expire_date). I use jdbc-odbc bridge from j2se 1.3.1.
I appreciate any help.
Thanks, Brian

May I refer to a recent topic where I explained a lot about date conversion between JDBC and SQLServer?
http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jsp?forum=48&thread=241049
Try how far this helps you, then ask more.

Similar Messages

  • PreparedStatement.setDate(new java.sql.Date(long))

    Anyone knows how to set insert a Date with Time, Day, Year into a database? I have tried using the preparedStatement.setDate(new java.sql.Date(long)) but it only inserts yyyy mm dd but I want to include time too.
    Anyone knows how here? Please advice.

    how to create an instance of Timestamp?
    new java.sql.Timestamp(????)
    What to put in the parameter?I think that I might have answered that in another one of your posts, if not could you elaborate your problem
    http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jsp?forum=31&thread=165123

  • OpenSQLException - object of type java.sql.Date is not normalized

    Hi,
    I am attempting to code an SQL query in an EJB and get the following exception:
    com.sap.sql.log.OpenSQLException: The object of type java.sql.Date with the value '2010-06-04 13:21:09.424' assigned to host variable 1 is not normalized. It must not contain time components in the time zone running the virtual machine. at com.sap.sql.log.Syslog.createAndLogOpenSQLException(Syslog.java:85) at com.sap.sql.log.Syslog.createAndLogOpenSQLException(Syslog.java:124) at com.sap.sql.jdbc.common.CommonPreparedStatement.setDate(CommonPreparedStatement.java:650) at......
    Below is the code snippet I am using:
                        private static String selWQ  = "Select * from ZZZZ_TABLE " +
                                                                       "where DATEFROM >= ? " +
                                                                  "and DATETO <= ? ";
         public UsageRecord[] getRecords(Date fromDate,Date toDate)
              UsageRecord[] ura = null;
              String q          = null;
              ArrayList al      = new ArrayList();
              try
                   q = selWQ;
                   conn.open();
                   PreparedStatement p = conn.prepareStatement(q);               
                   p.setDate(1, fromDate);
                   p.setDate(2,toDate);                    
                   ResultSet rs = p.executeQuery();
    I have a PreparedStatement and am using setDate to set the values. The fromDate and toDate parameters are of type java.sql.Date
    Can someone please tell me what I am doing wrong and how to fix it?
    thanks
    Brian

    As requested, here is an example of what I used to resolve this:
                   PreparedStatement p = conn.prepareStatement(q);
                   SimpleDateFormat ddf = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
                                               String sFrom = ddf.format(new java.util.Date(fromDate));
                   String sTo   = ddf.format(new java.util.Date(toDate));
                   p.setDate(1, java.sql.Date.valueOf(sFrom));
                   p.setDate(2, java.sql.Date.valueOf(sTo));
                   ResultSet rs = p.executeQuery();
    fromDate and toDate are parameters of type long...
    regards
    Brian

  • Problem Writing java.sql.Date to MS Access

    I have a relatively simple application that is for my own use (not distributed on an enterprise-wide basis). As I don't have an IT staff, I'm using a rudimentary Java front-end (v1.3.1) and a Microsoft Access backend.
    I seem to have trouble using INSERT/UPDATE statements with the MS Access Date/Time data type. Below is an example of code being used (id is defined as Text, amount is a Number and timestamp is Date/Time):
    conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:odbc:markets", "", "");
    conn.setAutoCommit(true);
    String sql = "INSERT INTO temp (id, amount, timestamp) VALUES (?, ?, ?)";
    PreparedStatement stmt = conn.prepareStatement(sql);
    String id = args[0];
    int len = id.length();
    java.sql.Date dt = new java.sql.Date(new java.util.Date().getTime());
    stmt.setString(1, id);
    stmt.setDouble(2, id.length());
    // I think the problem is here - the JDBC driver doesn't properly map dates to Access???
    stmt.setDate(3, dt);
    stmt.execute();
    stmt.close();
    conn.close();And I get the following error:
    java.sql.SQLException: [Microsoft][ODBC Microsoft Access
    Driver] Syntax error in INSERT INTO statement.
            at sun.jdbc.odbc.JdbcOdbc.createSQLException (JdbcOdbc.java:6879)
            at sun.jdbc.odbc.JdbcOdbc.standardError (JdbcOdbc.java:7036)
            at sun.jdbc.odbc.JdbcOdbc.SQLExecDirect (JdbcOdbc.java:3065)
            at sun.jdbc.odbc.JdbcOdbcStatement.execute (JdbcOdbcStatement.java:338)
            at TestWritingDate.main(TestWritingDate.java:31) I'm virtually certain this is a translation problem with
    the java.sql.Date and the JDBC driver. But I can't seem
    to overcome this. Any help is DESPERATELY needed.
    Thanks.
    Matt

    That was it....thanks...didn't even consider that....perhaps I should start using class names that are already in use too :-). Thanks again...

  • Error IllegalArgumentException in java.sql.Date used PreparedStatement

    I'm found bug (probably). I have a table with column DATA type. Now I connect do database use JDBC in Java, and create PreparedStatement:
    PreparedStatement stmt = conn.prepareStatement("insert into \"Appuser\" (\"IDUser\", \"createAccountDate\") values (?,?)");
    Column createAccountDate is a DATA type. And now I invoke:
    stmt.setInt(1, 1);
    stmt.setInt(2, new java.sql.Date(-2508265596206959779));
    stmt.execute();
    and last line return exception:
    java.lang.IllegalArgumentException
    at sun.util.calendar.ZoneInfo.getOffset(ZoneInfo.java:368)
    at oracle.jdbc.driver.DateCommonBinder.zoneOffset(OraclePreparedStatement.java:15423)
    at oracle.jdbc.driver.DateCommonBinder.setOracleCYMD(OraclePreparedStatement.java:15561)
    at oracle.jdbc.driver.DateBinder.bind(OraclePreparedStatement.java:15641)
    at oracle.jdbc.driver.OraclePreparedStatement.setupBindBuffers(OraclePreparedStatement.java:2866)
    at oracle.jdbc.driver.OraclePreparedStatement.processCompletedBindRow(OraclePreparedStatement.java:2151)
    at oracle.jdbc.driver.OraclePreparedStatement.executeInternal(OraclePreparedStatement.java:3280)
    at oracle.jdbc.driver.OraclePreparedStatement.execute(OraclePreparedStatement.java:3390)
    at // line stmt.execute();
    Another values of Data are OK. Probably value -2508265596206959779 cause that error.
    It's a bug? Better will be SQLException if it is a bug.
    My configuration:
    Oracle Database 10g Express Edition Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Product
    PL/SQL Release 10.2.0.1.0 - Production
    CORE     10.2.0.1.0     Production
    TNS for 32-bit Windows: Version 10.2.0.1.0 - Production
    NLSRTL Version 10.2.0.1.0 - Production
    Windows XP SP3, Java 1.6.0_20,
    ojdbc14.jar, Oracle JDBC Driver version - "10.2.0.1.0XE

    Probably value -2508265596206959779 cause that errorMaybe, whatever that .date( -ReallyLotsOfmSec ) date values is, pretty sure its outside the valid values for a date column, 4712BC to 9999AD is the min/max.
    Perhaps the java code can handle it, an oracle date type can not.

  • Java.sql.Date vs java.util.Date vs. java.util.Calendar

    All I want to do is create a java.sql.Date subclass which has the Date(String) constructor, some checks for values and a few other additional methods and that avoids deprecation warnings/errors.
    I am trying to write a wrapper for the java.sql.Date class that would allow a user to create a Date object using the methods:
    Date date1 = new Date(2003, 10, 7);ORDate date2 = new Date("2003-10-07");I am creating classes that mimic MySQL (and eventually other databases) column types in order to allow for data checking since MySQL does not force checks or throw errors as, say, Oracle can be set up to do. All the types EXCEPT the Date, Datetime, Timestamp and Time types for MySQL map nicely to and from java.sql.* objects through wrappers of one sort or another.
    Unfortunately, java.sql.Date, java.sql.Timestamp, java.sql.Time are not so friendly and very confusing.
    One of my problems is that new java.sql.Date(int,int,int); and new java.util.Date(int,int,int); are both deprecated, so if I use them, I get deprecation warnings (errors) on compile.
    Example:
    public class Date extends java.sql.Date implements RangedColumn {
      public static final String RANGE = "FROM '1000-01-01' to '8099-12-31'";
      public static final String TYPE = "DATE";
       * Minimum date allowed by <strong>MySQL</strong>. NOTE: This is a MySQL
       * limitation. Java allows dates from '0000-01-01' while MySQL only supports
       * dates from '1000-01-01'.
      public static final Date MIN_DATE = new Date(1000 + 1900,1,1);
       * Maximum date allowed by <strong>Java</strong>. NOTE: This is a Java limitation, not a MySQL
       * limitation. MySQL allows dates up to '9999-12-31' while Java only supports
       * dates to '8099-12-31'.
      public static final Date MAX_DATE = new Date(8099 + 1900,12,31);
      protected int _precision = 0;
      private java.sql.Date _date = null;
      public Date(int year, int month, int date) {
        // Deprecated, so I get deprecation warnings from the next line:
        super(year,month,date);
        if(! isWithinRange(this))
          throw new ValueOutOfRangeException((RangedColumn)this, "" + this);
      public Date(String s) {
        super(0l);
        // Start Cut-and-paste from java.sql.Date.valueOf(String s)
        int year;
        int month;
        int day;
        int firstDash;
        int secondDash;
        if (s == null) throw new java.lang.IllegalArgumentException();
        firstDash = s.indexOf('-');
        secondDash = s.indexOf('-', firstDash+1);
        if ((firstDash > 0) & (secondDash > 0) & (secondDash < s.length()-1)) {
          year = Integer.parseInt(s.substring(0, firstDash)) - 1900;
          month = Integer.parseInt(s.substring(firstDash+1, secondDash)) - 1;
          day = Integer.parseInt(s.substring(secondDash+1));
        } else {
          throw new java.lang.IllegalArgumentException();
        // End Cut-and-paste from java.sql.Date.valueOf(String s)
        // Next three lines are deprecated, causing warnings.
        this.setYear(year);
        this.setMonth(month);
        this.setDate(day);
        if(! isWithinRange(this))
          throw new ValueOutOfRangeException((RangedColumn)this, "" + this);
      public static boolean isWithinRange(Date date) {
        if(date.before(MIN_DATE))
          return false;
        if(date.after(MAX_DATE))
          return false;
        return true;
      public String getRange() { return RANGE; }
      public int getPrecision() { return _precision; }
      public String getType() { return TYPE; }
    }This works well, but it's deprecated. I don't see how I can use a java.util.Calendar object in stead without either essentially re-writing java.sql.Date almost entirely or losing the ability to be able to use java.sql.PreparedStatement.get[set]Date(int pos, java.sql.Date date);
    So at this point, I am at a loss.
    The deprecation documentation for constructor new Date(int,int,int)says "instead use the constructor Date(long date)", which I can't do unless I do a bunch of expensive String -> [Calendar/Date] -> Milliseconds conversions, and then I can't use "super()", so I'm back to re-writing the class again.
    I can't use setters like java.sql.Date.setYear(int) or java.util.setMonth(int) because they are deprecated too: "replaced by Calendar.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH, int date)". Well GREAT, I can't go from a Date object to a Calendar object, so how am I supposed to use the "Calendar.set(...)" method!?!? From where I'm sitting, this whole Date deprecation thing seems like a step backward not forward, especially in the java.sql.* realm.
    To prove my point, the non-deprecated method java.sql.Date.valueOf(String) USES the DEPRECATED constructor java.util.Date(int,int,int).
    So, how do I create a java.sql.Date subclass which has the Date(String) constructor that avoids deprecation warnings/errors?
    That's all I really want.
    HELP!

    I appreciate your help, but what I was hoping to accomplish was to have two constructors for my java.sql.Date subclass, one that took (int,int,int) and one that took ("yyyy-MM-dd"). From what I gather from your answers, you don't think it's possible. I would have to have a static instantiator method like:public static java.sql.Date createDate (int year, int month, int date) { ... } OR public static java.sql.Date createDate (String dateString) { ... }Is that correct?
    If it is, I have to go back to the drawing board since it breaks my constructor paradigm for all of my 20 or so other MySQL column objects and, well, that's not acceptable, so I might just keep my deprecations for now.
    -G

  • Java, access database( mdb) and java.sql.date

    I having a problem querying my access database with user specified date the code is as follows
    //get results of income from database with respectto dates
         //so u first create the sql.date instances
         private void getResults(){
         String text1=from.getText();//text input is like this 01-01-2005
              String text2=to.getText();
         Date d1=new Date(Integer.parseInt(text1.substring(6)),Integer.parseInt(text1.substring(3,5)),Integer.parseInt(text1.substring(0,2)));
         JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(this,d1.toString());//traces date with 1900 added to year and 1 added to month
         try{
              //custom class DataSource used to connect to database
              Connection conn=DataSource.getConnection("RealFotoInc");
              PreparedStatement ps=conn.prepareStatement("select * from Members where date=?");
              ps.setDate(1,d1);
              ResultSet rs=ps.executeQuery();
              while(rs.next()){
                   System.out.println("going");
                   System.out.println("trial"+rs.getString(3));
         }catch(Exception se){
              JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(this,se);
         }and it prints out nothing I dont know what is wrong

    Whoever put that comment in there about "1900" and so on knew what had to be done. That "Date" class must be "java.sql.Date"; go and read the API documentation of that constructor you are using there. Then adjust the parameters you are passing to it accordingly.

  • Poblem with java.sql.Date while inserting to a table

    Hi All,
    I have a PostgreSQL database table which contains fields(columns ) of type date. I want to insert values to the table in the[b] �dd-MMM-YYYY� format using the prepared statement.
    My code is as follows
    java.text.DateFormat dateFormatter =new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("dd-MMM-yyyy");
    String formatedDate=dateFormatter.format(theDate);
    currentDate = new java.sql.Date(dateFormatter.parse(formatedDate).getTime())
    �������������������
    �������������������
    �������������������
    pst.setDate(12,currentDate);The problem is the currentDate variable gives date only in the �YYYY-MMM-dd� format but requirement is the currentDate variable should give date in the �dd-MMM-YYYY� format and this should be save to table as java.sql.Date type
    There is any solution???? please help me...
    Thanks and Regards,
    Hyson_05

    Hi,
    What are you talking about? A Date does always wrap a millisecond value, and doesn't have any formatting. It's the database, or your program which formats the date that you see.
    In short. You should format the value when you print it, and not when you store it.
    Kaj

  • Convert java.sql.Date to oracle.jbo.domain.Date in oaf

    Hi,
    Need to dafault NeedBydate(i get in from query as below) to a messagelovinput and make it read only.
    i am facing some issue in converting from java.sql.Date to oracle.jbo.domain.Date.
    unable to figure out the problem.
    below is the sample code im trying to use.
    PreparedStatement ps=pageContext.createPreparedStatement("select sysdate from dual");
    ResultSet rs=ps.executeQuery();
    if (rs!=null && ps.next()
    java.sql.Date sqlDate= rs.getDate(1);
    oracle.jbo.domain.Date oracleDate = new oracle.jbo.domain.Date(sqlDate.getTime());
    vorow.setAttribute("Datevalue",oracleDate);
    this is my assumption : to set to UI i need date in format dd-Mon-yyyy.(am i correct? as to get that format i tried to use simple date format class but no use)
    when i tried to use simple date format :unpaseable date exception was raised.
    please guide.

    Hi,
    Why are you using this code???
    PreparedStatement ps=pageContext.createPreparedStatement("select sysdate from dual");
    ResultSet rs=ps.executeQuery();
    if (rs!=null && ps.next()
    java.sql.Date sqlDate= rs.getDate(1);
    oracle.jbo.domain.Date oracleDate = new oracle.jbo.domain.Date(sqlDate.getTime());
    you can get sysdate using this and then set it
    oracle.jbo.domain.Date currentDate = am.getOADBTransaction().getCurrentUserDate();
    java.text.SimpleDateFormat displayDateFormat = new java.text.SimpleDateFormat ("yyyy-MM-dd");
    String DateForm = displayDateFormat.format(currentDate.dateValue());
    oracle.jbo.domain.Date dateset = new oracle.jbo.domain.Date(DateForm);
    and then set the attribute
    vorow.setAttribute("Datevalue",dateset);
    Thanks,
    Gaurav

  • Put java.sql.Date in correct format

    I need to put java.sql.Date in correct format to query an Oracle database.
    Here is my code:
            SimpleDateFormat formatter = new SimpleDateFormat("dd-MMM-yy");
            java.util.Date dateChosen = jXDatePicker1.getDate();
            String strDate = formatter.format(dateChosen);
            System.out.println("Date Chosen: " + strDate); // output is: 11-Feb-00
            java.util.Date parserDate = null;      
            try {
                parserDate = formatter.parse(strDate);
            } catch (ParseException re) {
                System.err.println("Exception caught: " + re.getMessage());
            // create java.sql.Date object
                java.sql.Date oraDate = new java.sql.Date(parserDate.getTime());
            System.out.println(oraDate);  // date is in this format: 2000-02-11
            System.out.println("formatted oraDate: " + formatter.format( oraDate ) ); // no good, stringIf I use formatter.format( oraDate ) I get the correct format (11-Feb-00) BUT it is no longer a sql Date, it is a String which can't be use.
    I have looked at the API and many other forum threads on this, any help would be greatly appreciated!

    In the class with the PreparedStatement, I pass the date like this:
    public class report extends javax.swing.JDialog {
         java.sql.Date newDate;
        public report(java.sql.Date passedOraDate, String passedtxtDate) {
            super();
            initComponents();
            setTitle("Report");
            setModal(true);
            newDate = passedOraDate;
            statusLabel.setText(passedtxtDate);
            System.out.println("passedtxtDate: " +passedtxtDate);       
            System.out.println("newDate: " +newDate);      
        }Here is the code that uses the actual PreparedStatement:
            try {
                // In my actual code I have all columns listed in query
                String query = "SELECT * FROM report WHERE repdate = ?";
                ps = conn.prepareStatement(query); // create a statement
                           ps.setDate(1, newDate); // set input parameter
                rs = ps.executeQuery();
                // extract data from the ResultSet
                ResultSetMetaData md = rs.getMetaData();
                int columns = md.getColumnCount();This is greatly edited to show relevant code!

  • Any latest addition regarding java.sql.Date

    I have separate strings "10/21/2003" and "02:33:27".
    Just to convert String "10/21/2003" to sql date, do I really need to call up simple date format and parsing it?
    why? there is no time associated with this string. The time is on a separate string.
    I am using preparedstatement.

    Did I do unnecessary steps in getting to sql.Date ?
    String sDate = "10/16/2003";
    String sTime = "02:12:54:;
    String year = sDate.substring(6,9);
    String month = sDate.substring(0,1);
    String day = sDate.subst....
    String sDateNew = year + "-" + month + "-" + day;
    // the string becomes 2003-10-16.
    java.text.SimpleDateFormat sdf = new java.text.SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
    java.util.Date uDate = sdf.parse(sDateNew);
    long time = uDate.getTime();
    java.sql.Date sqlDate = new java.sql.Date(time);
    pstmt.setDate(i, sqlDate);
    It works, but did I put in extra steps ?
    I tried using the same trick for sTime, but that did not work out.

  • How to use java.sql.Date ?

    hi there:
    I used
    ps.setDate(27, new java.sql.Date(new java.util.Date().getTime()));
    ps.executeUpdate();
    in my code to insert the current date to the 27th column of one table, this column's type is DATE, the database is ORACLE. However, I got the error like this one: ORA-01843: not a valid month.
    I think I incorrectly used the java.sql.Date API to cause this error. So anyone can tell me how to use it correctly?
    Thanks for the answers,
    Sway

    Other columns are all VARCHAR2 type;
    The oracle error message indicated that this is a
    date-related one. 27th are the only column using DATE
    So I came to draw my conclusion that the SQL might be
    wrong.Except that if, for example, the date column is actually at index 26 then Oracle might try to convert the string being passed in (at 26) as a date. But it isn't a date. So then oracle is going to throw an exception indicating that something is wrong - like that the month is invalid.

  • How do I create a Dynamic java.sql.Date ArrayList or Collection?

    I Have a MySQL table with a Datetime field with many values inserted.
    I want to know which is the Best way to capture all the Inserted DB values inside a Dynamic Array.
    I get errors that state that I should use Matching data-types, and plus I don't know how to create or fill a Dynamic Date ArrayList/Collection.
    Please Help, I need this urgently...

    package pruebadedates;
    import java.sql.*;
    * @author J?s?
    public class ClaseDeDates {
        /** Creates a new instance of ClaseDeDates */
         * @param args the command line arguments
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            java.sql.Date aDate[] = null;       
            Connection con = null;
            Statement stmt = null;
            ResultSet rs = null;
            try{
                Class.forName("com.mysql.jdbc.Driver").newInstance();
                con = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:mysql://localhost/pruebafechas", "root", "picardias");
                    if(!con.isClosed()){
                    stmt = con.createStatement();
                    stmt.executeQuery ("SELECT dates FROM datestable");
                    rs = stmt.getResultSet();
                        while (rs.next())
                        aDate[] = rs.getDate("dates");
            catch(Exception e)
               System.out.println(e);
            //System.out.println(aDate);     
    }Hi, There is my code and the errors that I get are:
    found : java.sql.Date
    required: java.sql.Date[]
    aDate = rs.getDate("dates");
    Actually I have No idea as How to get a Result set into an ArrayList or Collection. Please tell me how to do this Dynamically. I have like 25 records in that Database table, but they will grow, so I would really appreciate to know the code to do this. I suspect my problem is in the bolded part of my code.
    Thank you very much Sir.

  • How to convert String date to java sql date

    I have an html form for entering the Date on retreving that value in a java servlet i get it as a string i want to convert that date to SQL date format so that i could use setDate() method of the java.sql.Date class to update the date value in the database.
    i used the following way but i need the code without using the deprecated ones.
    String delDate = (String)p_Request.getParameter("deleteDate");
    [b]java.util.Date utilDate = new java.util.Date(delDate);
    java.sql.Date deleteDate = new java.sql.Date(utilDate.getTime());
    custCode = (String)p_Request.getValue("custCode");
    thanx in advance.

    Check out the later posts in http://forum.java.sun.com/thread.jspa?threadID=647681&messageID=3814745#3814745

  • Convert Calendar to Java.sql.Date

    I seached for a solution for converting a Calendar-object to a java.sql.date for inserting it into a MySQL DB (DateTime). I know this question is a FAQ. The solution I found is the following code:
    java.sql.Date sqlDate =  new java.sql.Date(cal.getTime().getTime() );When i do a print of the sqlDate to the console I get: sqlDate: 2005-06-27
    But when I look into de DB I get the following date: 27/05/1905
    I know that in Java the months are starting from 0-�11 and that the years counting is starting from 1900. But I assume that the solution is not to just add the correct month and year manually. because I get a correct console-output. If I do this I get a correct DB Date, but a wrong console-date.

    II dont know if you found an answer but I needed a similar solution so I wrote a test program.
    Let me know if this solves the problem for you.
    import java.util.*;
    import java.sql.*;
    public class dateTest{
    public static void main(String args[]){
    // Step by step
    // Calendar rightNow = Calendar.getInstance();
    // java.util.Date today = rightNow.getTime();
    // long theTime = today.getTime();
    // java.sql.Date sDate = new java.sql.Date(theTime);
    // In one line
    java.sql.Date sDate = new java.sql.Date(Calendar.getInstance().getTime().getTime());
    System.out.println("sDate is: "+sDate.toString());
    }

Maybe you are looking for

  • Frequently getting issue in queues

    Hi Gurus, Can any body tell me the resolution for one of the issue which we are currently facing is 'object is locked by this user xxxxx" we are getting in smq2 of ecc system so we are resolving this issue by resetting the status of queue so it is wo

  • Setup.exe won't compete to allow driver installation

    I've been using my K7N2 Delta2 Platinum motherboard without issues for years now.  Made no system changes whatsoever but a windows update caused me tons of issues.  I took the opportunity to clear out all my files and start from scratch.  Reformatted

  • Airport disk utility not working

    Hi I have just got myself a new airport base station (b,g,n) and all is nearly working well. I have an iBook g4 mini Mac g4 and an iMac Intel all working wireless no problem (all only on G). I have put a USB hard drive on the base station so that we

  • Single cell JTextField editor in JTreeTable

    - I have a JTreeTable. -I want to create a leaf renaming scheme in which a JTextField pops up over the leaf node during editing -Allows the user to input text. When focus is lost, the text will be passed to the node user object represented by the lea

  • Sample code to sign and verify

    Hi, Those of you who might be following my threads will know that signing and verifying data is proving to be a big problem on my Java Card. I use JC 2.1.1 Could anyone please post a simple code snippet that signs AND verifies data. Please post code