Re: Converting time interval to double precision of time unit - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Alban Hertroys
Subject Re: Converting time interval to double precision of time unit
Date
Msg-id 02CF9FED-4DCA-4FF6-9926-B87CE167F0B0@solfertje.student.utwente.nl
Whole thread Raw
In response to Converting time interval to double precision of time unit  (Mike Toews <mwtoews@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: Converting time interval to double precision of time unit  (Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>)
List pgsql-general
On 30 Mar 2010, at 18:29, Mike Toews wrote:

> I'm using 8.3, and I'm trying to work with the interval type, and I
> can't seem to get things right. I've been all over the docs[1,2], and
> there is no mention on how this can be done.
>
> While I can get:
> SELECT '3 day 2 hour 34 minute'::interval
>
> .. how can then get the fractional hours of this time interval in
> double precision (or seconds, minutes, years, decades, etc.)?
>
> Do I really need to extract the time subcomponents and do the math myself?

You shouldn't try to do that. How do you expect to convert an interval type to a timestamp without having a timestamp
tobase it on? It's a relative quantity with a variable value depending on it's base value. For a meaningful answer it
requiresinformation about DST changes, different month lengths, leap years, etc, which it won't have if you don't tell
whereyou're basing your interval off. 

If instead you base your interval on a relevant base-timestamp, then you can simply extract epoch from the result,
althoughthats in seconds and not (fractional) hours, but that's a linear relationship. 

For example,

SELECT extract(epoch from now() + interval '3 days 2 hours 34 minutes')


Alban Hertroys

--
If you can't see the forest for the trees,
cut the trees and you'll see there is no forest.


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