On Mon, 2012-07-16 at 14:08 -0400, David Johnston wrote:
[------------]
> 
> Specific, but unknown (e.g., day of week, month, year, etc...) results could
> return "NaN" though "NULL" is also, probably more, reasonable given the
> context.
> 
> The goal would be to use "Infinity" in case where "<>" comparisons are
> common and use "NULL" where "=" comparisons are common. 

Is that even possible to implement? (e.g.: "SELECT * FROM log WHERE
start_date <> 'XXXX-YY-ZZ' and end_date = 'ZZZZ-AA-BB'" - when both
start_date and end_date possibly have 'infinity')

Anyway, "NaN" looks quite appealing, particulary since currently:

SELECT date_part('year','infinity'::timestamp )  ;
 date_part 
-----------
         0
(1 row)

... can lead to applications misbehaving in strange ways.

I feal that date_part() on infinity, should behave "similarly to"
division by zero - an exception. But seeing a lot of code obfuscated
with checks for division by zero before doing an opperation, I'd opt for
silently returning a NaN in most cases, with fields like 'year',
'century', 'epoch', etc. returning 'Infinity'.

-R


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