On 10/19/23 11:22, Ashutosh Bapat wrote: > On Thu, Oct 19, 2023 at 2:31 PM Tomas Vondra > <tomas.von...@enterprisedb.com> wrote: > >> >> Does that explain the algorithm? I'm not against clarifying the comment, >> of course. > > Thanks a lot for this explanation. It's clear now. > >> I tried to do that, but I ran into troubles with the "date" tests. I >> needed to build values that close to the min/max values, so I did >> something like >> >> SELECT '4713-01-01 BC'::date + (i || ' days')::interval FROM >> generate_series(1,10) s(i); >> >> And then the same for the max date, but that fails because of the >> date/timestamp conversion in date plus operator. >> >> However, maybe two simple generate_series() would work ... >> > > Something like this? select i::date from generate_series('4713-02-01 > BC'::date, '4713-01-01 BC'::date, '-1 day'::interval) i;
That works, but if you try the same thing with the largest date, that'll fail select i::date from generate_series('5874896-12-01'::date, '5874897-01-01'::date, '1 day'::interval) i; ERROR: date out of range for timestamp regards -- Tomas Vondra EnterpriseDB: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company