On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 3:02 AM, Jasen Betts <jasen@xnet.co.nz> wrote:
> On 2009-11-16, Konstantin Izmailov <pgfizm@gmail.com> wrote:
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>> I'm trying to read "money" field using PQgetvalue (PostgreSQL 8.3.7). The
>> function returns 9 bytes, smth like 0h 0h 0h 0h 0h 0h 14h 0h 0h, for the
>> value '$50.2'. I could not find description anywhere on how to convert the
>> binary data into, for example, a double precision number.
>
> money is a 64 bit integer representing a number of cents, it appears
> to be big-endian byte order on ypur system
>
> it is deprecated and should not be used in new applications, use some
> sort of numeric instead.
>
>> Would you please help me find a method of converting binary "money" data
>> into a double precision?
>
> floating point is not recomended for financial calculations, but
> dividing the integer value by 100.0 should get you there.
if you are reading/writing binary data to/from postgres, you should
consider using libpqtypes:
PGmoney m;
res = PQexecf(conn, "INSERT INTO foo(m) values(%money) returning m", m);
PQgetf(res, 0, "#money", "m", &m); /* # notation pulls field by name */
boy, this question sure seems to come up an awful lot!
merlin