Bruce Momjian wrote:
> Tom Lane wrote:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bruce Momjian) writes:
> > > Document that age() adds days, then full months.
> > 
> > AFAICT, this documentation "improvement" is outright wrong.
> 
> I am now thinking no documentation paragraph is even needed. We have to
> use the number of months in the earlier date or simple computations
> would not work like:
> 
>       test=> select age('2004-05-29', '2004-06-28');
>          age
>       ----------
>        -30 days
>       (1 row)
> 
> The end of the earlier month is part of the interval between the two
> timestamps, while the end of the later month is not.  Of course with a
> multi-months span there are more chances for variance, but we certainly
> should give the right answer for an interval < 1 month.  I can just add
> a C comment.

I have updated the documentation to read:

   Note there can be ambiguity in the <literal>months</> returned by
   <function>age</> because different months have a different number of
   days.  <productname>PostgreSQL</>'s approach uses the month from the
   earlier of the two dates when calculating partial months.  For example,
   <literal>age('2004-06-01', '2004-04-30')</> uses April to yield
   <literal>1 mon 1 day</>, while using May would yield <literal>1 mon 2
   days</> because May has 31 days, while April has only 30.

-- 
  Bruce Momjian  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>          http://momjian.us
  EnterpriseDB                               http://www.enterprisedb.com

  + If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. +

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