On 2/15/21 8:55 AM, Ron wrote:
>
>
> The time portions of the part_date fields don't match...
>
> sides=> ALTER TABLE employer_response
> ADD CONSTRAINT amended_response_fk FOREIGN KEY
> (amended_response_id, part_date)
> REFERENCES employer_response(employer_response_id, part_date)
> ON DELETE NO ACTION DEFERRABLE INITIALLY DEFERRED ;
> ERROR: insert or update on table "employer_response_p2021_01" violates
> foreign key constraint "amended_response_fk"
> DETAIL: Key (amended_response_id, part_date)=(103309154, 2021-01-06
> 00:00:00) is not present in table "employer_response".
> sides=>
>
> sides=> select employer_response_id, amended_response_id, part_date
> from strans.employer_response
> where amended_response_id = 103309154;
> employer_response_id | amended_response_id | part_date
> ----------------------+---------------------+---------------------
> 103309156 | *103309154 *| 2021-01-06*00:00:00*
> (1 row)
>
> sides=>
> sides=>
> sides=> select employer_response_id, amended_response_id, part_date
> from strans.employer_response
> where employer_response_id = 103309154;
> employer_response_id | amended_response_id | part_date
> ----------------------+---------------------+---------------------
> *103309154* | | 2021-01-06 *15:14:03*
> (1 row)
To add to my previous post regarding the part about the data transfer
process. You might look for code that did something like:
select current_date::timestamp;
current_date
---------------------
2021-02-15 00:00:00
In other words turned a date into a timestamp.
>
>
> --
> Angular momentum makes the world go 'round.
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@aklaver.com