"Raman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > [ okay: ] > "select current_time AT TIME ZONE INTERVAL '+5:30'" > [ not okay: ] > "select current_time AT TIME ZONE INTERVAL time_difference from customer_events"
"TIME ZONE INTERVAL" is not a SQL construct. You have misunderstood the interaction of two different SQL constructs: timestamp AT TIME ZONE timezonespec INTERVAL 'interval-literal' One of the possible forms of "timezonespec" in the AT TIME ZONE operator is an interval value, so your first example works fine. Your second example does not work because the INTERVAL 'foo' construct is only for simple literal constants. > here : time_difference - is my varchar column in the table customer_events. Why are you using varchar rather than an interval column? An interval value would work directly in this construct and would provide some checking that entered values are sane. If you are absolutely intent on using varchar as the column datatype, you can do a run-time cast like this: select current_time AT TIME ZONE "interval"(time_difference) from customer_events but don't complain when the query fails because some rows contain time_difference strings that don't look like legal interval values... regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend