"Dhugael McLean" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > select '1 day'::interval - '55 minutes'::interval;
> ?column? > ----------------- > 1 day -00:55:00 > If the interval periods are both minutes (hours - hours, days - days, etc), > this works fine. Days - minutes seems to fail. This should output 23:05:00. No, this result is correct IMHO. Days and minutes are not interconvertible, because there are not always 24 hours in a day. As an example using EST5EDT zone (current US DST law): regression=# select '2007-03-11'::timestamptz; timestamptz ------------------------ 2007-03-11 00:00:00-05 (1 row) regression=# select '2007-03-11'::timestamptz + '1 day'::interval; ?column? ------------------------ 2007-03-12 00:00:00-04 (1 row) regression=# select ('2007-03-11'::timestamptz + '1 day'::interval) - '55 minutes'::interval; ?column? ------------------------ 2007-03-11 23:05:00-04 (1 row) regression=# select '2007-03-11'::timestamptz + ('1 day'::interval - '55 minutes'::interval); ?column? ------------------------ 2007-03-11 23:05:00-04 (1 row) regression=# select '2007-03-11'::timestamptz + '23:05:00'::interval; ?column? ------------------------ 2007-03-12 00:05:00-04 (1 row) Postgres gets the fourth case right, but would fail if we adopted your approach, as shown by the fifth case. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 5: don't forget to increase your free space map settings