While it is true that a plain getObject(int columnIndex)
will return an org.h2.api.TimestampWithTimeZone
object, using getObject(int columnIndex, Class<T> type)
to return a java.time.OffsetDateTime
seems to work fine for me using H2 version 1.4.196:
package h2test;
import java.sql.*;
import java.time.OffsetDateTime;
public class H2testMain {
public static void main(String[] args) {
try (Connection conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:h2:mem:test")) {
Statement st = conn.createStatement();
st.execute("CREATE TABLE TEST (ID INT PRIMARY KEY, TWTZ TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE)");
st.execute("INSERT INTO TEST (ID, TWTZ) VALUES (1, '1981-02-03 19:20:21-02:00')");
ResultSet rs = st.executeQuery("SELECT TWTZ FROM TEST WHERE ID=1");
rs.next();
OffsetDateTime odt = rs.getObject(1, OffsetDateTime.class);
System.out.println(odt.getClass().getName()); // java.time.OffsetDateTime
System.out.println(odt.toString()); // 1981-02-03T19:20:21-02:00
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace(System.err);
}
}
}