On Wed, Dec 19, 2007 at 08:14:17PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
> Richard Huxton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I'm not sure that (CURRENT_DATE AT TIME ZONE 'UTC') does what you think 
> > it does. Try setting your timezone to various offsets and exploring.
> 
> In fact, I think it's adjusting in exactly the wrong direction.
> 
> I get the right number from
> 
> regression=# select date_part('epoch', 'today'::timestamp at time zone 'UTC');
>  date_part  
> ------------
>  1198022400
> (1 row)
> 
> and the wrong one from
> 
> regression=# select date_part('epoch', 'today'::timestamptz at time zone 
> 'UTC'); 
>  date_part  
> ------------
>  1198058400
> (1 row)
> 
> and I think the locution with CURRENT_DATE is equivalent to the second
> case because timestamptz is the preferred type to promote date to.

Does that mean it's a postgresql bug?

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