From: | Karel Zak - Zakkr <zakkr(at)zf(dot)jcu(dot)cz> |
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To: | Mark Kirkwood <markir(at)ihug(dot)co(dot)nz> |
Cc: | forgacs(at)negral(dot)com, pgsql-sql(at)postgreSQL(dot)org, efte(at)negral(dot)com |
Subject: | Re: [SQL] RE: DATE Formating Problem Again |
Date: | 2000-03-02 11:10:39 |
Message-ID: | Pine.LNX.3.96.1000302120719.3304B-100000@ara.zf.jcu.cz |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-sql |
On Thu, 2 Mar 2000, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
> >I am searching after the date formatting solution, but didn't found a
> >correct one.
> >
> >So example ORACLE has
> > - to_char function to make any kind of date format from a date
> type:
> >to_char(now,'yyyy.mm.dd')
> > - to_date to makes a date type from any kind of string: to_date
> >('1999.11.23','yyyy.mm.dd')
> >(sniped...)
>
> I have wrestled a bit with this myself - being an Oracle dba ( but i'm
> alright now....),
> the date <-> char conversion is very different is Postgresql.
>
> However I have found that the "date_part" and "interval" functions seem
> to do the job ok,
> sometimes combined with the casting operator "::datetime".
>
> e.g : ( for release 7.0 )
> date -> number
The release 7.0 has to_char/to_date/to_timestamp functions too,
and it is very compatible with Oracle's to_char(). See the PostgreSQL
documentation for more details.
Karel
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