2016-09-05 5:17 GMT+02:00 Patrick B <patrickbake...@gmail.com>: > >> You might want to share the version of PostgreSQL you are using. >> >> You might want to try date_trunc and AT TIMEZONE function/operators- >> >> https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.4/static/functions-datetim >> e.html#FUNCTIONS-DATETIME-TRUNC >> >> SELECT date_trunc('day', tasks_start at TIME ZONE 'EST') >> >> Note: I have not tried this statement >> >> Is this something you are going to use often? If that is the case then >> consider to re-model your query. The moment you use an expression on a >> column it would not use a normal BTree index. >> >> > Hmm... I see.... > > > select date_trunc('day', TIMESTAMP '2016-08-10') FROM tasks > > > And I get: > > 2016-08-10 00:00:00 > > > > I actually need just the date 2016-08-10, without 00:00:00... >
cast to date. PostgreSQL timestamp shows time always. Regards Pavel > Any idea? > > Cheers > Patrick >