Thanks Max,

I should have added a comment to my prior post. I do use ruby objects
to generate/calculate the Time/Date/DateTime values. The INSERT
statement I mentioned in the original message I retrieved it from the
development.log file. As far as I know that is the real INSERT
statement that runs against the Oracle DB and as you can see the
values that were generated are not what Oracle is expecting (DD-MON-
YY), if you trust that other post that helped me find the problem.

On Dec 30, 8:25 am, Max Williams <[email protected]> wrote:
> Apologies if i'm missing the point, but you should always deal with
> actual Time/Date/DateTime ruby objects and let rails handle the
> translation into the format required by the database.
>
> So, if you do something like
>
> @foo = Foo.create(:time => Time.now)
>
> rails will translate Time.now into the appropriate format.
> --
> Posted viahttp://www.ruby-forum.com/.

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