Worked perfectly thanks, uri, and same technique works perfectly in
postgresql regexp_replace for info
On 29 June 2018 at 16:18, Mike Martin wrote:
> Thanks
>
>
> On Fri, 29 Jun 2018, 15:48 Uri Guttman, wrote:
>
>> On 06/29/2018 10:41 AM, Mike Martin wrote:
>>
>> sorry
>> -mm-dd hh:mm:ss.dd
Thanks
On Fri, 29 Jun 2018, 15:48 Uri Guttman, wrote:
> On 06/29/2018 10:41 AM, Mike Martin wrote:
>
> sorry
> -mm-dd hh:mm:ss.dd
> eg:
> 2018-01-01 12-45-10-456789 to
> 2018-01-01 12:45:10.456789
>
>
>
> please reply to the list and not to me!
>
> then why did you want lookbehind? this
On 06/29/2018 10:41 AM, Mike Martin wrote:
sorry
-mm-dd hh:mm:ss.dd
eg:
2018-01-01 12-45-10-456789 to
2018-01-01 12:45:10.456789
please reply to the list and not to me!
then why did you want lookbehind? this is very easy if you just grab the
time parts and reassemble them as you wan
On 06/29/2018 09:32 AM, Mike Martin wrote:
Hi
I am trying to convert a string of the format
2018-01-01 16-45-21-654278
to a proper timestamp string
so basically I want to replace all - after the date part
i am not sure what you are trying to do. show the after text that you
want. a proper t