Would someone please confirm that our behavior in the three queries below matches Oracle's behavior? --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tom Lane wrote: > "Belinda M. Giardine" <giardine@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > Should it be this way? > > Well, to_timestamp() is apparently designed not to complain when the > input doesn't match the format, which is not my idea of good behavior > ... but your example is in fact wrong. 'Month' means a 9-character > field, so you are short a couple of spaces. > > regression=# select to_timestamp('January 2006', 'Month YYYY'); > to_timestamp > ------------------------ > 0006-01-01 00:00:00-05 > (1 row) > > regression=# select to_timestamp('January 2006', 'Month YYYY'); > to_timestamp > ------------------------ > 2006-01-01 00:00:00-05 > (1 row) > > You probably want > > regression=# select to_timestamp('January 2006', 'FMMonth YYYY'); > to_timestamp > ------------------------ > 2006-01-01 00:00:00-05 > (1 row) > > Or, as suggested upthread, forget to_timestamp and just use the native > timestamp or date input conversion, which on the whole is a lot more > robust (it *will* throw an error if it can't make sense of the input, > unlike to_timestamp). > > regards, tom lane > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 1: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate > subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx so that your > message can get through to the mailing list cleanly -- Bruce Momjian bruce@xxxxxxxxxx EnterpriseDB http://www.enterprisedb.com + If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. +