On 03/09/2011 09:59 AM, Dmitriy Igrishin wrote:
2011/3/9 Adrian Klaver <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>>
On Wednesday, March 09, 2011 5:34:41 am Dmitriy Igrishin wrote:
>
> But I am missing something or there is a documentation inaccuracy:
>
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/static/functions-formatting.html#FUNCTIO
> NS-FORMATTING-NUMERICMOD-TABLEsays: fill mode (suppress padding
blanks and
> zeroes)
>
> Test:
> dmitigr=> select to_char(12,'FM0009');
> to_char
> ---------
> 0012
>
> dmitigr=> select length(to_char(12,'FM0009'));
> length
> --------
> 4
>
> So, FM suppresses only padding blanks not zeroes...
>
> Any comments?
>
test(5432)aklaver=>select to_char(12,'9999');
to_char
---------
12
test(5432)aklaver=>select to_char(12,'FM9999');
to_char
---------
12
It is a little confusing, but you asked for the 0 in your
specification so they
are not considered padding.
Look at the examples in the table listed below to get an idea of
what I am
talking about.
http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.0/static/functions-formatting.html
Table 9-25
Yes, I see, thanks!
I just talking about phrase "fill mode (suppress padding blanks and zeroes)"
in the documentation should be rephrased to "fill mode (suppress padding
blanks)".
To get technical it means suppress unspecified padding O's. See below
for example.
Or I misunderstood what is "padding zeroes" without explicitly
specification "0" pattern in the format format template...
This combination from the example table shows that:
to_char(-0.1, 'FM9.99') '-.1'
to_char(0.1, '0.9') ' 0.1'
The 0 in 0.1 is not strictly needed, so if you use FM it will be suppressed.
--
Adrian Klaver
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
--
// Dmitriy.
--
Adrian Klaver
[email protected]
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