On 20 March 2014 20:07, Josh Berkus <j...@agliodbs.com> wrote: > On 03/20/2014 09:56 AM, Alexandr wrote: >> Here is the text of my proposal which I've applied to GSoC. >> (and link >> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1vBjQzhFT_fgoIkoEP5TVeyFA6ggsYlLq76tghGVUD6A/edit?usp=sharing) >> >> Any suggestions and comments are welcome. >> Because I don't know the code of PostgreSQL well I decide not to >> participate is QSoC with previous proposal (rewrite pg_dump and >> pg_restore as libraries). But I'm very interested to participate in QSoC >> 2014 as a part of PostgreSQL. So It's my new proposal. > > Per my comments on the GSOC app, it looks good, but I'd like to see some > "stretch goals" if you are able to implement the new function before > GSOC is over. For example, one thing which has been frequently > requested is functions to display intervals in the unit of your choice > ... for example, convert "1 day" to "14400 seconds".
+1 This is definitely something I've wanted in the past, like getting the number of minutes between 2 timestamps without converting to seconds since epoch then doing a subtraction. like: date_diff(timestamptz, timestamptz, interval) returns decimal # SELECT date_diff('2014-02-04 12:44:18+0'::timestamptz, '2014-02-08 20:10:05+0'::timestamptz, '1 second'); date_diff ----------- 372347 (1 row) # SELECT date_diff('2014-02-04 12:44:18+0'::timestamptz, '2014-02-08 20:10:05+0'::timestamptz, '5 seconds'); date_diff ----------- 74469 (1 row) # SELECT date_diff('2014-02-04 12:44:18+0'::timestamptz, '2014-02-08 20:10:05+0'::timestamptz, '1 day'); date_diff -------------------- 4.3095717592592593 (1 row) Although perhaps there's a more flexible and useful way of doing this that. One would probably want to convert an interval to such units too, like '3 days' in seconds. -- Thom -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers