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postgresqldatetimeintervals

PostgreSQL how to concat interval value '2 days'


In PostgreSQL I want to concat the current_timestamp with an interval as follows:

select current_timestamp + interval 2||' days'

But when I do, I get an error:

[Err] ERROR:  syntax error at or near "2"
LINE 1: select current_timestamp + interval 2||' days'

But if I do it like this, it works correctly:

select current_timestamp + interval '2 days'

Why does one work, but not the other?

With reference to the following page http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.0/static/functions-datetime.html


Solution

  • Part of the problem is that the standard SQL expression for intervals quotes the number, but not the keywords. So you have to be careful.

    select current_date, current_date + interval '2' day;
    --
    2012-02-21   2012-02-23 00:00:00
    

    In PostgreSQL, quoting like '2 day' and '2 days' also works. So you might think that '2' || ' days' would be equivalent, but it's not.

    select current_date, current_date + interval '2' || ' days';
    --
    2012-02-21   2012-02-21 00:00:02 days
    

    The solution, as A.H. said, is to cast the result string as an interval.

    You can also use a variable in place of 2. This generates a calendar for 2012.

    -- 0 to 365 is 366 days; 2012 is a leap year.
    select ('2012-01-01'::date + (n || ' days')::interval)::date calendar_date
    from generate_series(0, 365) n;
    

    I use that final cast to date, because date + interval returns a timestamp.