In mysql I am able to do this:
SELECT *
FROM table
WHERE auth_user.lastactivity > NOW() - 100
now in postgresql I am using this query:
select * from table where column_date > now()- INTERVAL '6 hours';
Here is what the MySQL docs say about NOW()
:
Returns the current date and time as a value in
YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS
orYYYYMMDDHHMMSS.uuuuuu
format, depending on whether the function is used in a string or numeric context. The value is expressed in the current time zone.
mysql> SELECT NOW();
-> '2007-12-15 23:50:26'
mysql> SELECT NOW() + 0;
-> 20071215235026.000000
Now, you can certainly reduce your smart date to something less...
SELECT (
date_part('year', NOW())::text
|| date_part('month', NOW())::text
|| date_part('day', NOW())::text
|| date_part('hour', NOW())::text
|| date_part('minute', NOW())::text
|| date_part('second', NOW())::text
)::float8 + foo;
But, that would be a really bad idea, what you need to understand is that times and dates are not stupid unformated numbers, they are their own type with their own set of functions and operators
So the MySQL time essentially lets you treat NOW()
as a dumber type, or it overrides +
to make a presumption that I can't find in the MySQL docs. Eitherway, you probably want to look at the date
and interval
types in pg.
You can also use now()
in Postgres. The problem is you can't add/subtract integers from timestamp
or timestamptz
. You can either do as Mark Byers suggests and subtract an interval, or use the date
type which does allow you to add/subtract integers
SELECT now()::date + 100 AS date1, current_date - 100 AS date2
Use an interval instead of an integer:
SELECT *
FROM table
WHERE auth_user.lastactivity > CURRENT_TIMESTAMP - INTERVAL '100 days'
Here is an example ...
select * from tablename where to_char(added_time, 'YYYY-MM-DD') = to_char( now(), 'YYYY-MM-DD' )
added_time is a column name which I converted to char for match