The "at time zone" clause that can decorate a timetsamp[tz] value seems to 
allow an argument that’s an arbitrary expression that yields a value whose data 
type is "interval". Here’s a contrived exotic example:

select '2021-05-21 12:00:00 UTC'::timestamptz at time zone
  ('2015-05-21 17:00:00'::timestamp - '2015-05-21 17:00:00'::timestamp) +
  make_interval(mins=>-30) -
  '30 minutes'::interval*2;

It runs without error and gives the answer that I'd expect.

You can also supply a value whose data type is "interval" when you set the 
session's timezone. But you must use the special "set time zone" syntax rather 
than the general "set timezone =" (or "to") syntax. This works:

set time zone interval '-7 hours';

Moreover, the minus sign has the meaning that ordinary mortals (as opposed to 
native POSIX speakers) expect. That's nice. But even this tiny spelling change:

set time zone '-7 hours'::interval;

brings a "42601: syntax error".

The asymmetry harms usability. And it means that careful reference doc ends up 
voluminous, tortuous and off-putting. Nobody likes to have to study and 
remember whimsical rules that seem to have no logical justification.

Am I failing to see that there's a logical parsing paradox that means that 
arbitrary "interval" expressions are acceptable as the argument of "at time 
zone" but not as the argument of "set time zone"?

Meanwhile, I'm writing a "set_timezone() procedure" with a "text" overload 
(that will check against a list of approved values) and an "interval" overload 
that will check that the value is in a sensible range* and generate the 
acceptable syntax to execute "set time zone" dynamically.
____________________________________________________________

* sensible range for "interval" values from this:

select '~names'   as "view",  max(utc_offset), min(utc_offset) from 
pg_timezone_names
union all
select '~abbrevs' as "view",  max(utc_offset), min(utc_offset) from 
pg_timezone_abbrevs
order by 1;



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