On 23.06.2016 16:30, Bruce Momjian wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 23, 2016 at 07:41:26AM +0000, amul sul wrote:
>> On Monday, 20 June 2016 8:53 PM, Alex Ignatov <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>> On 13.06.2016 18:52, amul sul wrote:
>>> And it wont stop on some simple whitespace. By using to_timestamp you
>>> can get any output results by providing illegal input parameters values:
>>> postgres=# SELECT TO_TIMESTAMP('2016-06-13 99:99:99', 'YYYYMMDD
>>> HH24:MI:SS');
>>> to_timestamp
>>> ------------------------
>>> 2016-01-06 14:40:39+03
>>>
>>> (1 row)
>> We do consume extra space from input string, but not if it is in format string, see below:
>>
>> postgres=# SELECT TO_TIMESTAMP('2016-06-13 15:43:36', 'YYYY/MM/DD HH24:MI:SS');
>> to_timestamp
>> ------------------------
>> 2016-06-13 15:43:36-07
>> (1 row)
>>
>> We should have same treatment for format string too.
>>
>> Thoughts? Comments?
> Well, the user specifies the format string, while the input string comes
> from the data, so I don't see having them behave the same as necessary.
>
To be honest they not just behave differently. to_timestamp is just
incorrectly handles input data and nothing else.There is no excuse for
such behavior:
postgres=# SELECT TO_TIMESTAMP('20:-16-06:13: 15_43:!36', 'YYYY/MM/DD
HH24:MI:SS'); to_timestamp
------------------------------ 0018-08-05 13:15:43+02:30:17
(1 row)
Alex Ignatov
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