On Sunday, December 28, 2014 12:54:30 PM Pavel Stehule wrote:
> Hi
> 
> try
> 
> postgres=# set datestyle to DMY;
> SET
> postgres=# SELECT '19/08/2014'::date;
>     date
> ------------
>  2014-08-19
> (1 row)
> 
> Postgres supports following styles only:
> 
> DEFAULT      EUROPEAN     ISO          NONEUROPEAN  SQL
> YMD
> DMY          GERMAN       MDY          POSTGRES     US
> 
> or more exactly:
> 
> postgres=# set datestyle to SQL,DMY;
> SET
> postgres=# SELECT '19/08/2014'::date;
>     date
> ------------
>  19/08/2014
> (1 row)
> 
> 
> http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.4/static/datatype-datetime.html

Thanks for the link. I was following this - 
http://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/19679/how-to-set-postgresql-database-to-see-date-as-mdy-permanently.
 This actually lead me to those combinations 
that I had already tried.

Now I have another problem:

prac_db=# SET datestyle = "SQL, DMY";
SET
prac_db=# copy orders from '/home/arup/postgresql/order.csv' with CSV 
DELIMITER ',' HEADER ;
ERROR:  time zone displacement out of range: " 9-25 AM"
CONTEXT:  COPY orders, line 2, column delivery_time: " 9-25 AM"
prac_db=#

=======
ERROR:  time zone displacement out of range: " 9-25 AM"
=======

How to fix this ?

prac_db=# \d orders ;
                                         Table "public.orders"
      Column      |          Type          |                         Modifiers
------------------+------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------
 order_id         | integer                | not null default 
nextval('orders_order_id_seq'::regclass)
 delivery_address | text                   |
 order_date       | date                   |
 delivery_date    | date                   |
 status           | text                   |
 delivery_time    | time without time zone |
 courier_id       | integer                |
Indexes:
    "orders_pkey" PRIMARY KEY, btree (order_id)

\d: extra argument ";" ignored
prac_db=#


-- 
================
Regards,
Arup Rakshit
================
Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, 
if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not 
smart enough to debug it.

--Brian Kernighan


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