Re: Hourly dates - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Steve Crawford
Subject Re: Hourly dates
Date
Msg-id 4A402751.9060101@pinpointresearch.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Hourly dates  (Andrew Maclean <andrew.amaclean@gmail.com>)
Responses Re: Hourly dates
List pgsql-general
Andrew Maclean wrote:
> Is this the best way of getting a table of hourly dates?
>
> -- How to generate a table of dates at hourly intervals between two dates.
>
> -- select timestamp 'epoch' + generate_series * interval '1 second' as
> dates from generate_series(extract(epoch from date_trunc('hour',
> timestamp '2001-02-16 20:38:40'))::bigint,extract(epoch from
> date_trunc('hour', timestamp '2001-02-17 20:38:40'))::bigint, 3600)
> select generate_series * interval '1 second' +  date_trunc('hour',
> timestamp '2001-02-16 20:38:40') as dates
>   from generate_series(0,extract(epoch from(date_trunc('hour',
> timestamp '2001-02-17 20:38:40') - date_trunc('hour', timestamp
> '2001-02-16 20:38:40')))::bigint, 3600)
>
> The commented out query seems to take into account the timezone which
> is not what I want.
>
> Andrew
>
>
>

Depends on what you have available as input. If you know the starting
time and number of records it's pretty easy:

Without time-zone:
select '2009-03-05 0100'::timestamp + generate_series(0,100) * '1
hour'::interval;
...
 2009-03-07 23:00:00
 2009-03-08 00:00:00
 2009-03-08 01:00:00
 2009-03-08 02:00:00
 2009-03-08 03:00:00
 2009-03-08 04:00:00
...


With time-zone info:
select '2009-03-05 0100'::timestamptz + generate_series(0,100) * '1
hour'::interval;
...
 2009-03-07 23:00:00-08
 2009-03-08 00:00:00-08
 2009-03-08 01:00:00-08
 2009-03-08 03:00:00-07
 2009-03-08 04:00:00-07
 2009-03-08 05:00:00-07
 2009-03-08 06:00:00-07
...

Cheers,
Steve


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