Re: Have I found an interval arithmetic bug? - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Bruce Momjian |
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Subject | Re: Have I found an interval arithmetic bug? |
Date | |
Msg-id | 20210405183754.GC12179@momjian.us Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: Have I found an interval arithmetic bug? (Justin Pryzby <pryzby@telsasoft.com>) |
Responses |
Re: Have I found an interval arithmetic bug?
|
List | pgsql-hackers |
On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 01:15:22PM -0500, Justin Pryzby wrote: > On Mon, Apr 05, 2021 at 02:01:58PM -0400, Bruce Momjian wrote: > > On Mon, Apr 5, 2021 at 11:33:10AM -0500, Justin Pryzby wrote: > > > > https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/datatype-datetime.html#DATATYPE-INTERVAL-INPUT > > > > « …field values can have fractional parts; for example '1.5 week' or '01:02:03.45'. Such input is converted to theappropriate number of months, days, and seconds for storage. When this would result in a fractional number of months ordays, the fraction is added to the lower-order fields using the conversion factors 1 month = 30 days and 1 day = 24 hours.For example, '1.5 month' becomes 1 month and 15 days. Only seconds will ever be shown as fractional on output. » > > > > I see that. What is not clear here is how far we flow down. I was > > looking at adding documentation or regression tests for that, but was > > unsure. I adjusted the docs slightly in the attached patch. > > I should have adjusted the quote to include context: > > | In the verbose input format, and in SOME FIELDS of the more compact input formats, field values can have fractional parts[...] > > I don't know what "some fields" means - more clarity here would help indicate > the intended behavior. I assume it is comparing the verbose format to the ISO 8601 time intervals format, which I have not looked at. Interesting I see this as a C comment at the top of DecodeISO8601Interval(); * A couple exceptions from the spec: * - a week field ('W') may coexist with other units --> * - allows decimals in fields other than the least significant unit. I don't actually see anything in our code that doesn't support factional values, so maybe the docs are wrong and need to be fixed. Actually, according to our regression tests, this fails: SELECT '5.5 seconds 3 milliseconds'::interval; ERROR: invalid input syntax for type interval: "5.5 seconds 3 milliseconds" but that is the verbose format, I think. > > The interaction of months/days/seconds is so imprecise that passing it > > futher down doesn't make much sense, and suggests a precision that > > doesn't exist, but if people prefer that we can do it. > > I agree on its face that "months" is imprecise (30, 31, 27, 28 days), > especially fractional months, and same for "years" (leap years), and hours per > day (DST), but even minutes ("leap seconds"). But the documentation seems to > be clear about the behavior: > > | .. using the conversion factors 1 month = 30 days and 1 day = 24 hours > > I think the most obvious/consistent change is for years and greater to "cascade > down" to seconds, and not just months. Wow, well, that is _an_ option. Would people like that? It is certainly easier to explain. -- Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> https://momjian.us EDB https://enterprisedb.com If only the physical world exists, free will is an illusion.
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