Agreed

On Wed, Apr 3, 2019 at 9:53 AM Jacques Nadeau <jacq...@apache.org> wrote:
>
> Option 1 sounds good to me. Let's take to a vote.
>
> On Tue, Apr 2, 2019 at 8:53 PM Micah Kornfield <emkornfi...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Based on the discussion so far, my attempt at concrete Schema proposals
>> below.    Jacques I think summarizes what we've discussed, apologies if
>> I've misunderstood.  Wes would Option 1 work to support the Pandas Time
>> Delta use-case?  I'm leaning towards Option 1 if it satisfies everyone (but
>> happy to implement whatever we come to a consensus on).
>>
>> ** Option 1:  New Type: **
>> /// An absolute length of time unrelated to any calendar artifacts.  For
>> the purposes
>> /// of Arrow Implementations, adding this value to a Timestamp ("t1")
>> naively (i.e. simply summing
>> /// the two number) is acceptable even though in some cases the resulting
>> Timestamp (t2) would
>> /// not account for leap-seconds during the elapsed time between "t1" and
>> "t2".  Similarly, representing
>> /// the difference between two Unix timestamp is acceptable, but would
>> yield a value that is possibly a few seconds
>> /// off from the true elapsed time.
>> ///
>> ///  The resolution defaults to
>> /// millisecond, but can be any of the other supported TimeUnit values as
>> /// with Timestamp and Time types.  This type is always represented as
>> /// an 8-byte integer.
>> table DurationInterval {
>>    unit: TimeUnit = MILLISECOND;
>> }
>>
>> ** Option 2: New TimeDelta enum on Interval Unit (strong definition around
>> leap-seconds): **
>>
>> enum IntervalUnit: short { YEAR_MONTH, DAY_TIME, TIME_DELTA}
>> // A "calendar" interval which models types that don't necessarily
>> // have a precise duration without the context of a base timestamp (e.g.
>> // days can differ in length during day light savings time transitions).
>> In the case
>> // of TimeDelta it is possible no precise definition is possible if the
>> base timestamp occurs
>> // at an instant when a leap second was added (but would only differ by at
>> most 1 second).
>> // YEAR_MONTH - Indicates the number of elapsed whole months, stored as
>> //   4-byte integers.
>> // DAY_TIME - Indicates the number of elapsed days and milliseconds,
>> //   stored as 2 contiguous 32-bit integers (8-bytes in total).  Support
>> //   of this IntervalUnit is not required for full arrow compatibility.
>> // TIME_DELTA - Indicates absolute time difference between Unix Timstamps
>> (i.e. excluding leap seconds).  This value is always represented as an
>> 8-byte integer.
>> table Interval {
>>   unit: IntervalUnit;
>>   resolution: TimeUnit  // Only relevant for TIME_DELTA
>> }
>>
>> On Tue, Apr 2, 2019 at 10:03 AM Wes McKinney <wesmck...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> > Since there were some mentions of leap seconds:
>> >
>> > I think the intent of the timedelta/duration type should be to express
>> > the difference between UNIX timestamps (from second to nanosecond
>> > resolution), which don't include leap seconds. We use the
>> > timedelta64[ns] type in pandas for example, which is a
>> > nanosecond-resolution difference of UNIX timestamps.
>> >
>> > On Tue, Apr 2, 2019 at 10:05 AM Jacques Nadeau <jacq...@apache.org> wrote:
>> > >
>> > > >
>> > > > I could go either way, it has some benefits for forward compatibility I
>> > > > suppose, but on the other hand YAGNI, if you feel strongly, I'm ok
>> > > > including it.  However, the more optional fields we have for a specific
>> > > > enum value, makes me lean more towards a new type instead of just an
>> > enum.
>> > > >
>> > > I'm okay with skipping for now. Appreciate the focus on only what we
>> > > actually need.
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > > Could you elaborate on defining standard arithmetic conversions between
>> > > > time-delta/duration in seconds and other time unit (days, months,
>> > years) as
>> > > > part of the standard/format, I'm still not sure I understand what the
>> > > > use-case is here.
>> > > >
>> > >
>> > > Here goes nothing...
>> > >
>> > > Seems like there are two options for durations:
>> > > 1) they aren't related to any other type
>> > > 2) they have a relationship to timestamps and dates.
>> > >
>> > > If 1, then the only thing I could understand is real world duration how
>> > > seconds are defined (and fractions thereof). E.g. [1] :D. In this
>> > > situation, there is no way to express any unit of time of higher
>> > > granularity than a second (e.g. days) since it is up to application
>> > > implementer to define the relationship. This severely limits the
>> > > expressiveness of the concept. (I can't ever use something TimeUnit.DAYS)
>> > > and stops the ability to cover the existing interval YEAR_MONTH type I
>> > > believe (since it has a resolution of months).
>> > >
>> > > If 2, then we must define the canonical value of ts + duration, otherwise
>> > > duration are somewhat meaningless, thus the proposed translation chart
>> > > (which causes its own oddities depending on the resolution of the time
>> > type
>> > > you are adding to).
>> > >
>> > > That being said, having started to remember previous discussions on this,
>> > > I'm most inclined to simply pick #1 and ignore the need for anything
>> > more.
>> > > The curiousness of interval math in database systems underscores the fact
>> > > that it apparently doesn't matter that much. In most cases, today + 3
>> > > months is close enough to today + 90 days for government work.
>> > >
>> > > Let's +2 a patch and get it merged quickly so we never have to think
>> > about
>> > > this again :)
>> > >
>> > > [1]  "the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods
>> > > <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency> of the radiation
>> > corresponding to
>> > > the transition between the two hyperfine levels
>> > > <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperfine_structure> of the ground state
>> > of
>> > > the caesium-133 <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesium-133> atom" (at a
>> > > temperature of 0 K <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_zero>)
>> > >
>> > > >
>> >

Reply via email to