Timestamps are timestamps. They represent a date (incl. time) using an internal representation. But you can convert timestamps to/from strings using various formats. For example, if you need to display them or in order to export your data to an other software requiring some specific representation.
In the following code for Oracle, I convert from a string to a timestamp (TO_TIMESTAMP
) using a format corresponding to your first example. Then I "convert back" that timestamp to a string (TO_CHAR
) using an other format corresponding to your second representation:
-- Convert a string to a timestamp
WITH sample_data AS
(SELECT TO_TIMESTAMP('15-JUN-2014 01.00.00.0000 PM',
'DD-MON-YYYY HH12.MI.SS.FF4 PM') ts FROM DUAL)
-- Convert a timestamp to a string using a format corresponding
-- to "15-06-2014 13.00.00.0000"
SELECT TO_CHAR(ts, 'DD-MM-YYYY HH24.MI.SS.FF4') as result FROM sample_data;
Producing (the string):
result
15-06-2014 13.00.00.0000
Please note that you can convert from string to date in PostgreSQL too using (almost?) exactly the same date functions and formats.