Alban Hertroys <dalroi@solfertje.student.utwente.nl> writes:
> 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.
I think what Mike is actually looking for is
SELECT extract(epoch from interval '3 days 2 hours 34 minutes');
date_part
-----------
268440
(1 row)
although your point about the uncertainty of the conversion for units of
days or larger is certainly well-taken.
regards, tom lane