The XQuery current date function is used to retrieve the current date.
current-date()
Use the following XQuery expression to fetch the current date.
current-date.xqy:
let $date := current-date() return{$date}
Create a Java based XQuery executor program to read the current-date.xqy, passes it to the XQuery expression processor, and executes the expression. After that the result will be displayed.
XQueryTester.java
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import javax.xml.xquery.XQConnection;
import javax.xml.xquery.XQDataSource;
import javax.xml.xquery.XQException;
import javax.xml.xquery.XQPreparedExpression;
import javax.xml.xquery.XQResultSequence;
import com.saxonica.xqj.SaxonXQDataSource;
public class XQueryTester {
public static void main(String[] args){
try {
execute();
}
catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
catch (XQException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
private static void execute() throws FileNotFoundException, XQException{
InputStream inputStream = new FileInputStream(new File("current-date.xqy"));
XQDataSource ds = new SaxonXQDataSource();
XQConnection conn = ds.getConnection();
XQPreparedExpression exp = conn.prepareExpression(inputStream);
XQResultSequence result = exp.executeQuery();
while (result.next()) {
System.out.println(result.getItemAsString(null));
}
}
}Put the above both files to a same location. We put them on desktop in a folder name XQuery10. Compile XQueryTester.java using console. You must have JDK 1.5 or later installed on your computer and classpaths are configured.
Compile:
javac XQueryTester.java
Execute:
java XQueryTester
Output:
Here, +5:30 specifies the relative GMT time of the server.
