Hello all

We have some data that have entered a timestamp column from a csv. The data in 
the csv are in utc. We want to access the data in our native timezone (CET).

I am considering a few alternatives:


1.       Early in the process, convert to timestamptz and keep this datatype.

2.       Early in the process, convert to timestamp as understood in CET.  This 
will imply by convention that the data in the timestamp column represents CET. 
Users will need to be told that data represents CET, even if data is somwhere 
in the future kept in another country in another timezone.

I probably should choose 1 over 2. But I am a bit hesitant, probably because we 
almost never have used timestamptz.

Can we agree that the below query is selecting both the original utc timestamps 
and 2 and 1 (as decribed above)?

set timezone to 'cet';
select read_time read_time_utc, (read_time at time zone 'utc')::timestamp 
read_time_cet, (read_time at time zone 'utc')::timestamptz read_time_tz from t 
limit 10;

We are on Postgres 12.

Regards Niels Jespersen

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