On Sunday 22 November 2009 12:09:04 pm Thom Brown wrote: > 2009/11/22 Aaron Burnett <aburnett@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > this is how I do it if this helps: > > > > column_name timestamp without time zone NOT NULL DEFAULT > > ('now'::text)::timestamp(6) without time zone > > > > Hi Aaron. Thanks for the reply, but that would only insert the current > > date upon insertion into the table, not when the row is updated. > > For example > > CREATE TABLE timetest( > id SERIAL NOT NULL, > stuff text, > stamp timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT now() > ); > > INSERT INTO timetest (stuff) VALUES ('meow'); > > The table would contain: > > id | stuff | stamp > ----+-------+---------------------------- > 1 | meow | 2009-11-22 20:04:51.261739 > > But then I'd execute: > > UPDATE timetest SET stuff = 'bark' WHERE id = 1; > > id | stuff | stamp > ----+-------+---------------------------- > 1 | bark | 2009-11-22 20:04:51.261739 > > You can see the time hasn't changed. But I'd want that stamp column to > update to the current time without referring to that column in the update > statement. > > Thanks > > Thom You will need to use an UPDATE trigger with associated function. -- Adrian Klaver aklaver@xxxxxxxxxxx -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general