Allen Chen <rock...@gmail.com> writes:
>> That won't really help.  The fundamental point here is that '1 day' is
>> not the same concept as '24 hours', because of DST changes; and the
>> interval type treats them as different.

> I don't understand how DST changes matter for a time interval or how that
> could even be factored into calculations.  Could you elaborate on that?

The main case where it matters is timestamp plus or minus interval.
As an example, 2011-03-13 is a DST transition day where I live.  So:

regression=# select '2011-03-13 01:00'::timestamptz;
      timestamptz       
------------------------
 2011-03-13 01:00:00-05
(1 row)

regression=# select '2011-03-13 01:00'::timestamptz + '1 day'::interval;
        ?column?        
------------------------
 2011-03-14 01:00:00-04
(1 row)

regression=# select '2011-03-13 01:00'::timestamptz + '24 hours'::interval;
        ?column?        
------------------------
 2011-03-14 02:00:00-04
(1 row)

"Add 1 day" means "produce the same local time on the next day", whereas
"add 24 hours" means exactly that.

                        regards, tom lane

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