2010/12/10 Thomas Kellerer <spam_eater@xxxxxxx>
Alexander Farber, 10.12.2010 12:53:I have no idea what you are doing in PHP, but why don't you simply generate a valid date/time literal for Postgres using the to_char() function?
On Fri, Dec 10, 2010 at 12:33 PM, Thomas Kellerer<spam_eater@xxxxxxx> Âwrote:
And I'm not sure how to copy the Oracle's strange DATE
column best into PostgreSQL, without losing precision?
Oracle's DATE includes a time part as well.
So simply use a timestamp in PostgreSQL and everything should be fine.
Yes, but how can I copy Oracle's DATE into PostgreSQL's timestamp?
(I realize that this more an Oracle question, sorry)
What format string should I take for Oracle's to_date() function,
I don't see a format string to get epoch seconds there
Something like
SELECT 'TIMESTAMP '''||to_char(QDATETIME, 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS')||''''
FROM qtrack;
That literal can directly be used in an INSERT statement for PostgreSQL
He asked exactly that.
Regards
Thomas
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// Dmitriy.