Thread

  1. Where condition doesn't work as expected

    William Colls <william@williamcollsassoc.ca> — 2020-02-08T22:39:32Z

    I have the following condition a select statement:
    
      WHERE "datetime" > '2019-03-31 23:59:59'
    
    datetime is a character field with data in the format YYYY-MM-DD 
    HH:MM:SS. However it returns any line where the datetime field begins 
    with 2019. I suspect that I should be using timestamp values, but I 
    can't figure out how to cast the datetime field value to a timestamp.
    
    Thanks for your time.
    
    William.
    
    
    
    
    
  2. RE: Where condition doesn't work as expected

    Ken Benson <ken@infowerks.com> — 2020-02-08T22:43:46Z

    
    
    
    Ken Benson | ken @ infowerks-dot-com
    
    -----Original Message-----
    From: William Colls <william@williamcollsassoc.ca> 
    Sent: Saturday, February 8, 2020 2:40 PM
    To: pgsql-novice@lists.postgresql.org
    Subject: Where condition doesn't work as expected
    >>>>-----Original Message-----
    >>>>From: William Colls <william@williamcollsassoc.ca> 
    >>>>Sent: Saturday, February 8, 2020 2:40 PM
    >>>>To: pgsql-novice@lists.postgresql.org
    >>>>Subject: Where condition doesn't work as expected
    >>>>
    >>>>I have the following condition a select statement:
    >>>>
    >>>>  WHERE "datetime" > '2019-03-31 23:59:59'
    >>>>
    >>>>datetime is a character field with data in the format YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS. However it returns any line where the datetime field begins with 2019. I suspect that I should be using timestamp values, but I can't figure out how to cast the datetime field value to a timestamp.
    >>>>
    
    [Ken.B]  
    SELECT to_date('20170103','YYYYMMDD');
    https://www.postgresqltutorial.com/postgresql-to_date/
    
    
    >>>>Thanks for your time.
    >>>>
    >>>>William.
    >>>>
    I have the following condition a select statement:
    
      WHERE "datetime" > '2019-03-31 23:59:59'
    
    datetime is a character field with data in the format YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS. However it returns any line where the datetime field begins with 2019. I suspect that I should be using timestamp values, but I can't figure out how to cast the datetime field value to a timestamp.
    
    [Ken.B]  
    SELECT to_date('20170103','YYYYMMDD');
    https://www.postgresqltutorial.com/postgresql-to_date/
    
    Thanks for your time.
    
    William.
    
    
    
    
  3. Re: Where condition doesn't work as expected

    Bzzzz <lazyvirus@gmx.com> — 2020-02-08T23:18:55Z

    On Sat, 8 Feb 2020 17:39:32 -0500
    William Colls <william@williamcollsassoc.ca> wrote:
    
    > I have the following condition a select statement:
    > 
    >   WHERE "datetime" > '2019-03-31 23:59:59'
    > 
    > datetime is a character field with data in the format YYYY-MM-DD 
    > HH:MM:SS. However it returns any line where the datetime field begins 
    > with 2019. I suspect that I should be using timestamp values, but I 
    > can't figure out how to cast the datetime field value to a timestamp.
    
    Depending on what you need, use either TIMESTAMP or TIMESTAMPTZ.
    
    […] WHERE (datetime::TIMESTAMP) > TIMESTAMP'2019-03-31 23:59:59' ;
    
    (note that the TIMESTAMP to the right of the comparison is not
    mandatory.)
    
    As it costs, if you have no special reason for the "datetime" column to
    dwell in text or varchar, you should consider converting it to a
    TIMESTAMP or TIMESTAMPTZ type to avoid any conversion when querying.
    
    Jean-Yves
    
    
    
    
  4. RE: Where condition doesn't work as expected

    Stephen Froehlich <s.froehlich@cablelabs.com> — 2020-02-10T15:45:12Z

    To add some context to Bzzz's statement, read this page:
    https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-datetime.html
    
    If you were building this table from scratch it should be a timestamp to timestamptz.  ... if you can rebuild the table (CREATE TABLE [new_name] AS SELECT ...) https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/sql-createtableas.html  you probably should.
    
    - timestamp is for when you know its UTC
    - timestamp with time zone / timestamptz can trip you up with environment timezones on the client end, but at the end of the day its more flexible and robust. I always use it because it better matches the R POSIXct data type, which is what I always end up using on the client end. However, be prepared for time zones to drive you a little batty as different clients will default to different time zones for a given connection.
    
    --Stephen
    
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Bzzzz <lazyvirus@gmx.com> 
    Sent: Saturday, February 8, 2020 4:19 PM
    To: William Colls <william@williamcollsassoc.ca>
    Cc: pgsql-novice@lists.postgresql.org
    Subject: Re: Where condition doesn't work as expected
    
    On Sat, 8 Feb 2020 17:39:32 -0500
    William Colls <william@williamcollsassoc.ca> wrote:
    
    > I have the following condition a select statement:
    > 
    >   WHERE "datetime" > '2019-03-31 23:59:59'
    > 
    > datetime is a character field with data in the format YYYY-MM-DD 
    > HH:MM:SS. However it returns any line where the datetime field begins 
    > with 2019. I suspect that I should be using timestamp values, but I 
    > can't figure out how to cast the datetime field value to a timestamp.
    
    Depending on what you need, use either TIMESTAMP or TIMESTAMPTZ.
    
    […] WHERE (datetime::TIMESTAMP) > TIMESTAMP'2019-03-31 23:59:59' ;
    
    (note that the TIMESTAMP to the right of the comparison is not
    mandatory.)
    
    As it costs, if you have no special reason for the "datetime" column to dwell in text or varchar, you should consider converting it to a TIMESTAMP or TIMESTAMPTZ type to avoid any conversion when querying.
    
    Jean-Yves