Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb:
> >> I know I can do a select to_date(now(),'yyyy-mm-dd') and it will return the
> >> date.  However, how do I get the time?  Also, is this the proper way to get
> >> the date portion of a timestamp?
> > 
> > select now()::timetz;
> > select now()::time;
> > select now()::date;
> 
> What's the inverse?  Say I have a DATE and a TIME, and want to
> create a TIMESTAMP with them?

You can CAST it:

test=# select '2006/07/29 10:00:00'::timestamp;
      timestamp
---------------------
 2006-07-29 10:00:00
(1 row)

or:

test=# select ('2006/07/29'::date || ' ' || '10:00:00'::time)::timestamp;
      timestamp
---------------------
 2006-07-29 10:00:00
(1 row)


HTH, Andreas
-- 
Really, I'm not out to destroy Microsoft. That will just be a completely
unintentional side effect.                              (Linus Torvalds)
"If I was god, I would recompile penguin with --enable-fly."    (unknow)
Kaufbach, Saxony, Germany, Europe.              N 51.05082°, E 13.56889°

---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend

Reply via email to