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All,

I am migrating a few processes from SQL Server (SQL) to ParAccel (PostgreSQL). One of the processes I have is currently using the following conversion.

Select convert(datetime,convert(varchar,MAX(getdate()), 101),101)  

After you run this query, you get: 2014-05-07 00:00:00.000

I found a function in postgresql that could do this job. The function is:

SELECT date_trunc('day', getdate());

When you execute that query, you get the following: 5/7/2014 12:00:00 AM

Is there a way in PostgreSQL that you could get the same results as in SQL. SO I want to get 2014-05-07 00:00:00.000

Also, how can I just get the date, instead of the whole TIMESTAMP.

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  • getdate() is not a (standard) function in PostgreSQL, are you sure about your example? I haven't seen date_trunc() using this format either, it's just truncating data and not formatting data. May 7, 2014 at 16:58

2 Answers 2

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If you would to get date from timestamp, just do

postgres=# select current_timestamp::date;
    now     
────────────
 2014-05-07
(1 row)

There are two ways

  • preferred - use a to_char function

    postgres=# select to_char(current_timestamp, 'YYYY-MM-DD hh24:mm:ss.ms');
            to_char         
    ─────────────────────────
    2014-05-07 19:05:52.537
    (1 row)
    
  • or with datestyle config variable

    postgres=# set datestyle TO ISO;
    SET
    Time: 0.353 ms
    postgres=# select current_timestamp;
                  now              
    ───────────────────────────────
     2014-05-07 19:12:44.236758+02
    (1 row)
    
    Time: 0.406 ms
    postgres=# set datestyle TO GERMAN ;
    SET
    Time: 0.565 ms
    postgres=# select current_timestamp;
                   now               
    ─────────────────────────────────
     07.05.2014 19:12:51.781772 CEST
    (1 row)
    
    Time: 0.700 ms
    

related postgresql doc

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Use the to_char function to format date/time values as text (http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.3/static/functions-formatting.html).

If you're only interested in the date part, cast the timestamps to date type.

To change the default date appearance, you can set:

datestyle = 'iso, mdy'

either in your session, or globally through postgresql.conf

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