From: | Thomas F(dot)O'Connell <tfo(at)sitening(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | Edmund Bacon <ebacon(at)onesystem(dot)com> |
Cc: | pgsql-sql(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: help with to_date and to_char |
Date: | 2004-10-20 03:29:36 |
Message-ID: | 4489EDEA-2248-11D9-A5E5-000D93AE0944@sitening.com |
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Lists: | pgsql-sql |
Yup, even better. For some reason I gave up trying to_date( '02', 'MON'
), which clearly wasn't working.
Thanks for the improvement!
-tfo
--
Thomas F. O'Connell
Co-Founder, Information Architect
Sitening, LLC
http://www.sitening.com/
110 30th Avenue North, Suite 6
Nashville, TN 37203-6320
615-260-0005
On Oct 19, 2004, at 6:00 PM, Edmund Bacon wrote:
> Thomas F.O'Connell wrote:
>> There might be a better way, but this should do what you want. And I
>> think that you can safely replace '05' with when_month.
>> select to_char( to_date( '05' || '/' || to_char( current_date,
>> 'DD/YYYY' ), 'MM/DD/YYYY' ), 'MON' );
>
> Perhaps
> select to_char(to_date('02', 'MM'), 'MON');
>
> is better. When current_date is, say Aug 31 then
>
> select to_char( to_date('05' || '/' || to_char(current_date,
> 'DD/YYYY'),
> 'MM/DD/YYYY' ), 'MON' );
>
> returns 'MAR', which is probably not what you want.
>
> This works with 7.3.2, 7.4.5 and 8.0beta2.
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