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DateTime::Format::Pg(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
DateTime::Format::Pg(3) |
DateTime::Format::Pg - Parse and format PostgreSQL dates and times
use DateTime::Format::Pg;
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Pg->parse_datetime( '2003-01-16 23:12:01' );
# 2003-01-16 23:12:01
DateTime::Format::Pg->format_datetime($dt);
This module understands the formats used by PostgreSQL for its DATE, TIME,
TIMESTAMP, and INTERVAL data types. It can be used to parse these formats in
order to create "DateTime" or
"DateTime::Duration" objects, and it can
take a "DateTime" or
"DateTime::Duration" object and produce a
string representing it in a format accepted by PostgreSQL.
The following methods can be used to create
"DateTime::Format::Pg" objects.
- •
- new( name => value, ... )
Creates a new
"DateTime::Format::Pg" instance. This
is generally not required for simple operations. If you wish to use a
different parsing style from the default then it is more comfortable to
create an object.
my $parser = DateTime::Format::Pg->new()
my $copy = $parser->new( 'european' => 1 );
This method accepts the following options:
- european
If european is set to non-zero, dates are assumed to be in
european dd/mm/yyyy format. The default is to assume US mm/dd/yyyy
format (because this is the default for PostgreSQL).
This option only has an effect if PostgreSQL is set to output
dates in the 'PostgreSQL' (DATE only) and 'SQL' (DATE and TIMESTAMP)
styles.
Note that you don't have to set this option if the PostgreSQL
server has been set to use the 'ISO' format, which is the default.
- server_tz
This option can be set to a
"DateTime::TimeZone" object or a
string that contains a time zone name.
This value must be set to the same value as the PostgreSQL
server's time zone in order to parse TIMESTAMP WITH TIMEZONE values in
the 'PostgreSQL', 'SQL', and 'German' formats correctly.
Note that you don't have to set this option if the PostgreSQL
server has been set to use the 'ISO' format, which is the default.
- •
- clone()
This method is provided for those who prefer to explicitly
clone via a method called
"clone()".
my $clone = $original->clone();
If called as a class method it will die.
This class provides the following methods. The parse_datetime, parse_duration,
format_datetime, and format_duration methods are general-purpose methods
provided for compatibility with other
"DateTime::Format" modules.
The other methods are specific to the corresponding PostgreSQL
date/time data types. The names of these methods are derived from the name
of the PostgreSQL data type. (Note: Prior to PostgreSQL 7.3, the TIMESTAMP
type was equivalent to the TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE type. This data type
corresponds to the format/parse_timestamp_with_time_zone method but not to
the format/parse_timestamp method.)
This class provides the following parsing methods.
As a general rule, the parsing methods accept input in any format
that the PostgreSQL server can produce. However, if PostgreSQL's DateStyle
is set to 'SQL' or 'PostgreSQL', dates can only be parsed correctly if the
'european' option is set correctly (i.e. same as the PostgreSQL server). The
same is true for time zones and the 'australian_timezones' option in all
modes but 'ISO'.
The default DateStyle, 'ISO', will always produce unambiguous
results and is also parsed most efficiently by this parser class. I strongly
recommend using this setting unless you have a good reason not to.
- parse_datetime($string,...)
Given a string containing a date and/or time representation,
this method will return a new
"DateTime" object.
If the input string does not contain a date, it is set to
1970-01-01. If the input string does not contain a time, it is set to
00:00:00. If the input string does not contain a time zone, it is set to
the floating time zone.
If given an improperly formatted string, this method may
die.
- parse_timestamptz($string,...)
- parse_timestamp_with_time_zone($string,...)
Given a string containing a timestamp (date and time)
representation, this method will return a new
"DateTime" object. This method is
suitable for the TIMESTAMPTZ (or TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE) type.
If the input string does not contain a time zone, it is set to
the floating time zone.
Please note that PostgreSQL does not actually store a time
zone along with the TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE (or TIMESTAMPTZ) type but
will just return a time stamp converted for the server's local time
zone.
If given an improperly formatted string, this method may
die.
- parse_timestamp($string,...)
- parse_timestamp_without_time_zone($string,...)
Similar to the functions above, but always returns a
"DateTime" object with a floating time
zone. This method is suitable for the TIMESTAMP (or TIMESTAMP WITHOUT
TIME ZONE) type.
If the server does return a time zone, it is ignored.
If given an improperly formatted string, this method may
die.
- parse_timetz($string,...)
- parse_time_with_time_zone($string,...)
Given a string containing a time representation, this method
will return a new "DateTime" object.
The date is set to 1970-01-01. This method is suitable for the TIMETZ
(or TIME WITH TIME ZONE) type.
If the input string does not contain a time zone, it is set to
the floating time zone.
Please note that PostgreSQL stores a numerical offset with its
TIME WITH TIME ZONE (or TIMETZ) type. It does not store a time zone name
(such as 'Europe/Rome').
If given an improperly formatted string, this method may
die.
- parse_time($string,...)
- parse_time_without_time_zone($string,...)
Similar to the functions above, but always returns an
"DateTime" object with a floating time
zone. If the server returns a time zone, it is ignored. This method is
suitable for use with the TIME (or TIME WITHOUT TIME ZONE) type.
This ensures that the resulting
"DateTime" object will always have the
time zone expected by your application.
If given an improperly formatted string, this method may
die.
- parse_date($string,...)
Given a string containing a date representation, this method
will return a new "DateTime" object.
The time is set to 00:00:00 (floating time zone). This method is
suitable for the DATE type.
If given an improperly formatted string, this method may
die.
- parse_duration($string)
- parse_interval($string)
Given a string containing a duration (SQL type INTERVAL)
representation, this method will return a new
"DateTime::Duration" object.
If given an improperly formatted string, this method may
die.
This class provides the following formatting methods.
The output is always in the format mandated by the SQL standard
(derived from ISO 8601), which is parsed by PostgreSQL unambiguously in all
DateStyle modes.
- format_datetime($datetime,...)
Given a "DateTime" object,
this method returns a string appropriate as input for all date and
date/time types of PostgreSQL. It will contain date and time.
If the time zone of the
"DateTime" part is floating, the
resulting string will contain no time zone, which will result in the
server's time zone being used. Otherwise, the numerical offset of the
time zone is used.
- format_time($datetime,...)
- format_time_without_time_zone($datetime,...)
Given a "DateTime" object,
this method returns a string appropriate as input for the TIME type
(also known as TIME WITHOUT TIME ZONE), which will contain the local
time of the "DateTime" object and no
time zone.
- format_timetz($datetime)
- format_time_with_time_zone($datetime)
Given a "DateTime" object,
this method returns a string appropriate as input for the TIME WITH TIME
ZONE type (also known as TIMETZ), which will contain the local part of
the "DateTime" object and a numerical
time zone.
You should not use the TIME WITH TIME ZONE type to store dates
with floating time zones. If the time zone of the
"DateTime" part is floating, the
resulting string will contain no time zone, which will result in the
server's time zone being used.
- format_date($datetime)
Given a "DateTime" object,
this method returns a string appropriate as input for the DATE type,
which will contain the date part of the
"DateTime" object.
- format_timestamp($datetime)
- format_timestamp_without_time_zone($datetime)
Given a "DateTime" object,
this method returns a string appropriate as input for the TIMESTAMP type
(also known as TIMESTAMP WITHOUT TIME ZONE), which will contain the
local time of the "DateTime" object
and no time zone.
- format_timestamptz($datetime)
- format_timestamp_with_time_zone($datetime)
Given a "DateTime" object,
this method returns a string appropriate as input for the TIMESTAMP WITH
TIME ZONE type, which will contain the local part of the
"DateTime" object and a numerical time
zone.
You should not use the TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE type to store
dates with floating time zones. If the time zone of the
"DateTime" part is floating, the
resulting string will contain no time zone, which will result in the
server's time zone being used.
- format_duration($du)
- format_interval($du)
Given a "DateTime::Duration"
object, this method returns a string appropriate as input for the
INTERVAL type.
Some output formats of PostgreSQL have limitations that can only be passed on by
this class.
As a general rules, none of these limitations apply to the 'ISO'
output format. It is strongly recommended to use this format (and to use
PostgreSQL's to_char function when another output format that's not supposed
to be handled by a parser of this class is desired). 'ISO' is the default
but you are advised to explicitly set it at the beginning of the session by
issuing a SET DATESTYLE TO 'ISO'; command in case the server administrator
changes that setting.
When formatting DateTime objects, this class always uses a format
that's handled unambiguously by PostgreSQL.
If DateStyle is set to 'PostgreSQL', 'SQL', or 'German', PostgreSQL does not
send numerical time zones for the TIMESTAMPTZ (or TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE)
type. Unfortunately, the time zone names used instead can be ambiguous: For
example, 'EST' can mean -0500, +1000, or +1100.
You must set the 'server_tz' variable to a time zone that is
identical to that of the PostgreSQL server. If the server is set to a
different time zone (or the underlying operating system interprets the time
zone differently), the parser will return wrong times.
You can avoid such problems by setting the server's time zone to
UTC using the SET TIME ZONE 'UTC' command and setting 'server_tz' parameter
to 'UTC' (or by using the ISO output format, of course).
For the SQL (for DATE and TIMSTAMP[TZ]) and the PostgreSQL (for DATE) output
format, the server can send dates in both European-style 'dd/mm/yyyy' and in
US-style 'mm/dd/yyyy' format. In order to parse these dates correctly, you
have to pass the 'european' option to the constructor or to the
"parse_xxx" routines.
This problem does not occur when using the ISO or German output
format (and for PostgreSQL with TIMESTAMP[TZ] as month names are used
then).
"DateTime::Duration" stores months, days,
minutes and seconds separately. PostgreSQL only stores months and seconds and
disregards the irregular length of days due to DST switching and the irregular
length of minutes due to leap seconds. Therefore, it is not possible to store
"DateTime::Duration" objects as SQL
INTERVALs without the loss of some information.
In the SQL and German output formats, the server does not send an indication of
the sign with intervals. This means that '1 month ago' and '1 month' are both
returned as '1 mon'.
This problem can only be avoided by using the 'ISO' or
'PostgreSQL' output format.
Support for this module is provided via the datetime@perl.org email list. See
http://lists.perl.org/ for more details.
Daisuke Maki <daisuke@endeworks.jp>
Claus A. Faerber <perl@faerber.muc.de>
Copyright (c) 2003 Claus A. Faerber. Copyright (c) 2005-2007 Daisuke Maki
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file
included with this module.
datetime@perl.org mailing list
http://datetime.perl.org/
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