Jasbinder Singh Bali escribió: > Hi, > i have a column in my table defined like this: > > time_stamp timestamp DEFAULT ('now'::text)::timestamp with time zone Note that the column is of type timestamp, which _doesn't_ have a time zone. You probably want time_stamp timestamp with time zone DEFAULT ('now'::text)::timestamp with time zone > 1. What is the value after the dot (period) at the end. Like 760133 and > 90582 milliseconds > 2. How does it talk about the time zone. It doesn't because the time zone information is not being stored due to the datatype issue I mentioned above. Note: the time zone is not actually stored. What actually happens is that the value is "rotated" to GMT and stored as a GMT value, and then when you extract it from the database it is "rotated" to the current TimeZone for display. If you need to store what time zone a value "is in" you need to store that information in a separate column. -- Alvaro Herrera http://www.CommandPrompt.com/ The PostgreSQL Company - Command Prompt, Inc.