insert into employee(eid,dojo) SELECT
14,coalesce(to_char(dojo,'dd-mm-yyyy'),'')
from employee;
I have to insert into table by selecting it from table,my column dojo has not null constraint and timestamp doesn't allow '' to insert please provide an alternate for this if timestamp is null from select query
Your current query has severals problems, two of which I think my answer can resolve. First, you are trying to insert an empty string '' to handle NULL values in the dojo column. This won't work, because empty string is not a valid timestamp. As others have pointed out, one solution would be to use current_timestamp as a placeholder.
Another problem you have is that you are incorrectly using to_char to format your timestamp data. The output of to_char is a string, and the way you are using it would cause Postgres to reject it. Instead, you should be using to_timestamp(), which can parse a string and return a timestamp. Something like the following is what I believe you intend to do:
insert into employee (eid, dojo)
select 14, coalesce(to_timestamp(dojo, 'DD/MM/YYYY HH:MI:SS PM'), current_timestamp)
from employee;
This assumes that your timestamp data is formatted as follows:
DD/MM/YYYY HH:MI:SS PM (e.g. 19/2/1995 12:00:00 PM)
It also is not clear to me why you are inserting back into the employee table which has non usable data, rather than inserting into a new table. If you choose to reuse employee you might want to scrub away the bad data later.
you can use some default date value like 1st jan 1900 or now()
your query should be like
insert into employee(eid,dojo) SELECT
14,coalesce(to_char(dojo,'dd-mm-yyyy'),now())
from employee;
There is no such thing as a non-null yet blank timestamp. NULL = blank.
There is literally nothing you can do but store a valid timestamp or a null. Since you have a non-null constraint your only option is to pick a default timestamp that you consider "blank".
Using a hard coded date to indicate a blank value is a terrible terrible terrible idea btw. If it is blank, remove the not null constraint, make it null and move on.
I am not trying to be condescending but I do not think you understand nulls. See here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Null_(SQL)
Related
I'm trying to filter a record by date-time, but no success.
When I send the request from the client to the server, I can see that the date and time matches with the value stored in the entity. However, there's something I'm not understanding on the record, and I think it is the problem from not succeeding the filter.
I'd like to know how to store only date and time in postgres.
You can see in the image that it is not just storing the date and time, it has more information, and I would like to know how to save the date and time only, without this numerical sequence that comes after the time.
For example, I don't want it to be saved as: 2022-03-28 09:50:26.077
I want it to be saved like this: 2022-03-28 09:50:26
I've done a lot of research and haven't found any resources that can help me with this issue. I really don't know why it's saving this number sequence, I don't know if this is something that involves timezone...
Script SQL
create table mytable (
...
column_name timestamp not null default now()::timestamp
);
How to proceed with this? Is there any technique to remove those numbers and leave only the date and time?
You can use DATE_TRUNC():
CREATE TABLE mytable (
id int,
column_name timestamp not null default date_trunc('second', now()::timestamp)
);
INSERT INTO mytable(id) VALUES(1) RETURNING *;
I have a column saved as a character data type. This column is what I am going to be using as a date. The column goes "YYYY-MM-DD" in that format.
This is a problem because if I ever need to filter by date, I have to go
select col_1, col_2
from table
where date LIKE '2016-04%;
If I want to search for a date range, this turns into a giant complicated mess.
What is the easiest way to convert this to a "date" data type? I want it to continue to be in YYYY-MM-DD order (no timestamp).
My ultimate goal is to be able to search for dates in a format like this:
select col_1, col_2
from table
where date between 2016-01-01 AND 2016-05-31;
What do you guys recommend? I am terrified I am going to corrupt my date if I use an alter statement to convert my data type. (I have a copy of the data saved and can upload it again, but it will take forever.)
Edit: This is a VERY Large table.
Edit Part 2: I originally stored the data as a varchar data type because my dates were not uploading correctly and I got an error message when I tried to save as a date data type. The every date in this column is in the "YYYY-MM-DD" order. My solution was to save it as varchar to avoid the error message (I couldn't figure out what was wrong. I even got rid of leading and trailing spaces.)
Storing a date as a varchar was the wrong choice to begin with. It's very good that you want to change that.
The first step is to convert the columns using an ALTER TABLE statement:
alter table the_table
ALTER COLUMN col_1 TYPE date using col_1::date,
ALTER COLUMN col_2 TYPE date using col_2::date;
Note that this will fail if you have any value in those columns that cannot be convert to a correct date. If you get that you need to first fix those invalid strings before you can change the data type.
I want it to continue to be in YYYY-MM-DD order
This is a misconception. A DATE (or timestamp) does not have a "format". Once it's stored as a date you can display it in any format you want.
My ultimate goal is to be able to search for dates in a format like this:
2016-01-01 is not a valid date literal, a proper (i.e. correctly typed) date constant can be specified e.g. using date '2016-01-01' (note the single quotes!
So your query becomes:
select col_1, col_2
from table
where col_1 between date '2016-01-01' AND date '2016-05-31';
If you have a lot of queries like that you should consider creating an index on the date columns.
Regarding the date constant format:
Are you telling me that despite having the varchar data types, I can still (as of right now) search between specific dates by just typing the word date and putting single quotes between two dates
No, that's not the case. SQL is a strongly typed language and as such will only compare values of the same type.
Using an ANSI date literal (or e.g. to_date()) results in a type constant (i.e. a value with a specific data type).
The difference between date '2016-01-01' and '2016-01-01' is the same as between42(a number) and'42'` (a string).
If you compare a string with a date, you are comparing apples and oranges and the database will do an implicit data type conversion from one type to the other. This is something that should be avoided at all costs.
If you do not want to change the table, you should use the query sagi provided which explicitly converts the strings to dates and then does the comparison on (real) date values (not strings)
You can use POSTGRES TO_DATE() cast function :
SELECT col_1,col_2
FROM Your_Table
WHERE to_date(date_col,'yyyy-mm-dd') between to_date('2016-05-31','yyyy-mm-dd') and to_date('2016-01-01','yyyy-mm-dd')
What #a_horse said.
Plus, if you can't change the data type for some odd reason, to_date() is a safe option to convert the column on the column, but there is no point to use the same expression for provided constants. So:
SELECT col_1, col_2
FROM tbl
WHERE to_date(date, 'YYYY-DD-MM') BETWEEN date '2016-05-31' AND date '2016-01-01';
Or just use string literals without type. The type date is deferred from the context in this expression. And you don't even need to_date(). Since you are using ISO format already. A plain cast is safe:
WHERE date::date BETWEEN '2016-05-31' AND '2016-01-01';
Be sure to use ISO 8601 format for all date strings, so they are unambiguous and valid with any locale.
You can even have an expression index to support the query. Match the actual expression used in queries:
CREATE INDEX tbl_date_idx ON tbl ((date::date)); -- parentheses required!
But I wouldn't use the basic type name date as identifier to begin with.
I have a strange problem when retrieving records from db after comparing a truncated field with date_trunc().
This query doesn't return any data:
select id from my_db_log
where date_trunc('day',creation_date) >= to_date('2014-03-05'::text,'yyyy-mm-dd');
But if I add the column creation_date with id then it returns data(i.e. select id, creation_date...).
I have another column last_update_date having same type and when I use that one, still does the same behavior.
select id from my_db_log
where date_trunc('day',last_update_date) >= to_date('2014-03-05'::text,'yyyy-mm-dd');
Similar to previous one. it also returns record if I do id, last_update_date in my select.
Now to dig further, I have added both creation_date and last_updated_date in my where clause and this time it demands to have both of them in my select clause to have records(i.e. select id, creation_date, last_update_date).
Does anyone encountered the same problem ever? This similar thing works with my other tables which are having this type of columns!
If it helps, here is my table schema:
id serial NOT NULL,
creation_date timestamp without time zone NOT NULL DEFAULT now(),
last_update_date timestamp without time zone NOT NULL DEFAULT now(),
CONSTRAINT db_log_pkey PRIMARY KEY (id),
I have asked a different question earlier that didn't get any answer. This problem may be related to that one. If you are interested on that one, here is the link.
EDITS:: EXPLAIN (FORMAT XML) with select * returns:
<explain xmlns="http://www.postgresql.org/2009/explain">
<Query>
<Plan>
<Node-Type>Result</Node-Type>
<Startup-Cost>0.00</Startup-Cost>
<Total-Cost>0.00</Total-Cost>
<Plan-Rows>1000</Plan-Rows>
<Plan-Width>658</Plan-Width>
<Plans>
<Plan>
<Node-Type>Result</Node-Type>
<Parent-Relationship>Outer</Parent-Relationship>
<Alias>my_db_log</Alias>
<Startup-Cost>0.00</Startup-Cost>
<Total-Cost>0.00</Total-Cost>
<Plan-Rows>1000</Plan-Rows>
<Plan-Width>658</Plan-Width>
<Node/s>datanode1</Node/s>
<Coordinator-quals>(date_trunc('day'::text, creation_date) >= to_date('2014-03-05'::text, 'yyyy-mm-dd'::text))</Coordinator-quals>
</Plan>
</Plans>
</Plan>
</Query>
</explain>
"Impossible" phenomenon
The number of rows returned is completely independent of items in the SELECT clause. (But see #Craig's comment about SRFs.) Something must be broken in your db.
Maybe a broken covering index? When you throw in the additional column, you force Postgres to visit the table itself. Try to re-index:
REINDEX TABLE my_db_log;
The manual on REINDEX. Or:
VACUUM FULL ANALYZE my_db_log;
Better query
Either way, use instead:
select id from my_db_log
where creation_date >= '2014-03-05'::date
Or:
select id from my_db_log
where creation_date >= '2014-03-05 00:00'::timestamp
'2014-03-05' is in ISO 8601 format. You can just cast this string literal to date. No need for to_date(), works with any locale. The date is coerced to timestamp [without time zone] automatically when compared to creation_date (being timestamp [without time zone]). More details about timestamps in Postgres here:
Ignoring timezones altogether in Rails and PostgreSQL
Also, you gain nothing by throwing in date_trunc() here. On the contrary, your query will be slower and any plain index on the column cannot be used (potentially making this much slower)
I have created a table with a column date_time type (varchar2 (40) ) but when i try to insert the current system date and time the doesnt work it gives error (too many values). please tell me what's wrong with the insert statement.
create table HR (type varchar2 (20), raised_by number (6), complaint varchar2 (500), date_time varchar2(40))
insert into HR values ('request',6785,'good morning',sysdate,'YYYY/MM/DD:HH:MI:SSAM')
The immediate cause of the error is that you have too many values, as the message says; that is, more elements in your values clause than there are columns. It is better to explicitly list the column names to avoid future problems and confusion, so you're really doing this:
insert into HR (type, raised_by, complaint, date_time)
values ('request',6785,'good morning',sysdate,'YYYY/MM/DD:HH:MI:SSAM')
... sp you have four columns, but five values. You're trying to insert the current date/time as a string so you would need to use the to_char() function:
insert into HR (type, raised_by, complaint, date_time)
values ('request',6785,'good morning',
to_char(sysdate,'YYYY/MM/DD:HH:MI:SSAM'))
But it is bad practice to store a date (or any other structured data, such as a number) as a string. As the documentation notes:
Each value manipulated by Oracle Database has a data type. The data
type of a value associates a fixed set of properties with the value.
These properties cause Oracle to treat values of one data type
differently from values of another. For example, you can add values of
NUMBER data type, but not values of RAW data type.
If you use a string then you can put invalid values in. If you use a proper DATE data type then you cannot accidentally put an invalid or confusing value in. Oracle will also be able to optimise the use of the column, and will be able to compare values safely and efficiently. Although the format you're using is better than some, using string comparison you still can't easily compare two values to see which is earlier, so you can't properly order by the date_time column for example.
Say you inserted two rows with values 2013/11/15:09:00:00AM and 2013/11/15:08:00:00PM - which is earlier? You need to look at the AM/PM marker to realise the first one is earlier; with a string comparison you'd get it wrong because 8 would be sorted before 9. Using HH24 instead of HH and AM avoids that, but would still be less efficient than a true date.
If you need to store a date with a time component you can use the DATE data type, which has precision down to the second; or if you need fractional seconds too then you can use TIMESTAMP. Then your table and insert would be:
create table HR (type varchar2 (20), raised_by number (6),
complaint varchar2 (500), date_time date);
insert into HR (type, raised_by, complaint, date_time)
values ('request',6785,'good morning',sysdate);
You can still get the value in the format you wanted for display purposes as part of a query:
select type, raised_by, complaint,
to_char(date_time, 'YYYY/MM/DD:HH:MI:SSAM') as date_time
from HR
order by date_time;
TYPE RAISED_BY COMPLAINT DATE_TIME
-------------------- ---------- -------------------- ---------------------
request 6785 good morning 2013/11/15:08:44:35AM
Only treat a date as a string for display.
You can use TO_DATE() or TO_TIMESTAMP or To_char() function,
insert into HR values ('request',6785,'good morning',TO_DATE(sysdate, 'yyyy/mm/dd hh24:mi:ss'))
insert into HR values ('request',6785,'good morning',TO_TIMESTAMP(systimestamp, 'yyyy/mm/dd hh24:mi:ss'))
sysdate - It will give date with time.
systimestamp - It will give datetime with milliseconds.
To_date() - Used to convert string to date.
To_char() - Used to convert date to string.
Probably here you have to use To_char() because your table definition have varchar type for date_time column.
Use TIMESTAMP datatype for date_time. And while inserting use the current timestamp.
create table HR (type varchar2(20), raised_by number(6), complaint varchar2(500), date_time timestamp);
insert into HR values ('request',6785,'good morning', systimestamp);
For other options: http://psoug.org/reference/timestamp.html
I want to insert date and time in oracle database, I have created the table with columns
create table myadmin
( employe_id number(5),
supervisor Varchar2(20),
department Varchar2(20),
action Varchar2(20),
sdate date,
stime date)
While inserting the values below it gives an error. Please tell me how to insert the time ?
insert into myadmin
( employe_id,supervisor,department,action,sdate,stime) values
(83,'gaurav','helpdesk','pick','23-jan-2013','09:43:00');
You have to use keyword to_date for date insert in oracle like this.
to_date('23-01-2013','dd-mm-yyyy')
Basically you have to use keyword to_date('your date','your date format').
You can also add date and time together if you want and it would be something like this
to_date('23-01-2013 09:43:00','dd-mm-yyyy hh24:mi:ss')
A date in Oracle always has a date part and a time part. Having date and time in two separate columns only makes sense, if it can occur that date is null and time is not. (And still, you could set date to an improbable value like 1.1.0001 then.)
However, if you want to stick to those two separate fields, then make your string a datetime with the to_date function specifying the format used:
insert into myadmin
( employe_id,supervisor,department,action,sdate,stime) values
(83,'gaurav','helpdesk','pick',to_date('23-01-2013','dd-mm-yyyy'), to_date('09:43:00', 'hh24:mi:ss'));