> On 18 Jan 2024, at 19:20, Aleksander Alekseev <aleksan...@timescale.com> > wrote: > > Timestamp and TimestampTz are absolutely the same thing. My question is not about Postgres data types. I'm asking about examples in the standard. There's an example 017F22E2-79B0-7CC3-98C4-DC0C0C07398F. It is expected to be generated on "Tuesday, February 22, 2022 2:22:22.00 PM GMT-05:00". It's exaplained to be 164555774200000ns after 1582-10-15 00:00:00 UTC. But 164555774200000ns after 1582-10-15 00:00:00 UTC was 2022-02-22 19:22:22 UTC. And that was 2022-02-23 00:22:22 in UTC-05. Best regards, Andrey Borodin.
- Re: UUID v7 Andrey M. Borodin
- Re: UUID v7 Jelte Fennema-Nio
- Re: UUID v7 Przemysław Sztoch
- Re: UUID v7 Jelte Fennema-Nio
- Re: UUID v7 Andrey Borodin
- Re: UUID v7 Przemysław Sztoch
- Re: UUID v7 Lukas Fittl
- Re: UUID v7 Jelte Fennema-Nio
- Re: UUID v7 Przemysław Sztoch
- Re: UUID v7 Aleksander Alekseev
- Re: UUID v7 Andrey Borodin
- Re: UUID v7 Aleksander Alekseev
- Re: UUID v7 Sergey Prokhorenko
- Re: UUID v7 Andrey Borodin
- Re: UUID v7 Sergey Prokhorenko
- Re: UUID v7 David G. Johnston
- Re: UUID v7 Andrey Borodin
- Re: UUID v7 Andrey Borodin
- Re: UUID v7 Nikolay Samokhvalov
- Re: UUID v7 Nikolay Samokhvalov
- Re: UUID v7 Aleksander Alekseev