I have the following scenario:
I have employees who register their check in/out from their work. But they have 10 minutes of tolerance.
The late entries I get with this view:
CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW employees_late_entries
(
id,
created_datetime,
entry_datetime,
contact_id,
contact_name,
user_id,
employees_perm_id
)
AS
SELECT precence_records.id,
precence_records.created AS created_datetime,
("substring"(precence_records.created::text, 0, 11) || ' '::text) || contacts.entry_time::text AS entry_datetime,
contacts.id AS contact_id,
contacts.name AS contact_name,
precence_records.user_id,
precence_records.employees_perm_id
FROM precence_records,
contacts
WHERE
precence_records.type::text = 'entry'::text AND
contacts.employee = true AND
contacts.id = precence_records.contact_id AND
( ("substring"(precence_records.created::text, 0, 11) || ' '::text) || contacts.entry_time::text) < precence_records.created::text AND
precence_records.employees_perm_id IS NULL;
the precence_records.created
is the check in time and contacts.entry_time
its the time of the schedule entry time for the employee.
This is the condition contacts.entry_time
vs precence_records.created
to get the late entries:
( ("substring"(precence_records.created::text, 0, 11) || ' '::text) || contacts.entry_time::text) < precence_records.created::text
So I wanna do something like that:
( ("substring"(precence_records.created::text, 0, 11) || ' '::text) || (contacts.entry_time::text + 10 MINUTES) ) < precence_records.created::text
DATA TYPES:
precence_records.created TIMESTAMP contacts.entry_time VARCHAR
Can you help me please
entry_time
column? And why aren't you using atime
data type for that? And why do you need an additional time column ifcreated
already contains the date and time?`varchar
?)