On Fri, 22 Oct 2004, Tom Lane wrote: > As far as I can tell, Dennis is planning slavish adherence to the spec, > which will mean that the datatype is unable to cope effectively with > daylight-savings issues. So I'm unconvinced that it will be very > helpful to you for remembering local time in addition to true > (universal) time.
And exactly what issues is it that you see? The only thing I can think of is if you have a timestamp and then add an interval to it so we jump past the daylight saving time change date. Then the new timestamp will keep the old timezone data of say +01 even though we now have jumped into the daylight saving period of +02. If you are just storing actual timestamps then the standard definition works just fine. If I store '2004-10-22 16:20:04 +02' then that's exactly what I get back. No problem what so ever. There is no DST problem with that. It's possible that I will introduce some daylight saving bit or something like that, I'm not sure yet and I will not commit to anything until I've thought it over. I don't think there are that much of a problem as you claim however. Could you give a concret example where it will be a problem? My current thinking is that storing the time zone value as HH:MM is just fine and you avoid all the problems with political changes of when the DST is in effect or not. -- /Dennis Björklund ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly