Frank Miles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > If the application always passes the date to Postgres with the three-letter > month name where appropriate, and use the 4-digit year, it should be > comparatively bulletproof.
That pretty much assumes that you've already validated the input and converted it to an unambiguous form. I think much of this discussion is missing the point. ISTM when you're dealing with programmatic output, it's fairly easy to ensure that you are on the same page as the other program, and in that case there's a good argument for being strict about the expected field order. But when you are dealing with hand-entered input, you *do not know* what the user meant by input such as '01/03/2003'. You may think you know, but you're just fooling yourself. The only really bulletproof way of handling the matter is to close the loop by repeating the data back to the user in an obviously unambiguous format, say 03-Jan-2003 or 01-Mar-2003. If that wasn't what he meant, he can change it. When you handle things that way, there's a very good case for being as permissive as possible in the parsing of the initial input. PG's existing date parsing code is intended to support the second scenario. I don't mind offering an option to make it support the first scenario better --- but I will resist ripping out support for the second. regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED]