Re: [HACKERS] postgres and year 2000
От | Thomas G. Lockhart |
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Тема | Re: [HACKERS] postgres and year 2000 |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 3696358D.299EF93E@alumni.caltech.edu обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | postgres and year 2000 (Massimo Dal Zotto <dz@cs.unitn.it>) |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
> it seems that the year handling in pgsql dates is not very consistent: > The problem I see is that the same number is converted to a different > year depending on the number of digits and the number itself. I think > that this kind of things are the most likely sources of Y2K troubles. > A more consistent approach would be to treat the year literally and > let any smart hack with dates entirely to the user under his > responsability. I agree that there are some cases in your examples which should be giving a different result. Not *every* example you gave led to an incorrect or unpredictable result, so could you please identify those you feel are a problem? In glancing at the examples, the ones with zero value (but lots of zeros) seem to be a problem, and perhaps some or all of the ones with an odd number of year digits. Any others? We do need to handle two-digit years, and we currently do so using 1970 as the break point. I've read recently that some industries are using a "50/50 rule" for 2 digit conversions, where 1950 is the break point. Don't know if we should try to use that (rather than the "Unix rule" :), since it really doesn't offer a magic cure for all date possibilities. > Only then we could declare pgsql as full Y2K compliant. fwiw, the date candidates which are failing are outside the range of normal usage or could be considered mal-formed. But I should be able to get a fix in for it, and can post patches. Let me know what cases you would like tested and fixed (but let's not bog down in discussion on two-digit issues). - Tom
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