------------------------------------------------------------------------------ -- | -- Module: Database.PostgreSQL.Simple.Time -- Copyright: (c) 2012 Leon P Smith -- License: BSD3 -- Maintainer: Leon P Smith -- Stability: experimental -- -- Time types that supports positive and negative infinity. Also includes -- new time parsers and printers with better performance than GHC's time -- package. -- -- The parsers only understand the specific variant of ISO 8601 that -- PostgreSQL emits, and the printers attempt to duplicate this syntax. -- Thus the @datestyle@ parameter for the connection must be set to @ISO@. -- -- These parsers and printers likely have problems and shortcomings. Some -- that I know of: -- -- 1 @TimestampTZ@s before a timezone-dependent point in time cannot be -- parsed, because the parsers can only handle timezone offsets of a -- integer number of minutes. However, PostgreSQL will include seconds -- in the offset, depending on the historical time standards for the city -- identifying the time zone. -- -- This boundary point often marks an event of some interest. In the US -- for example, @timestamptz@s before @1883-Nov-18 12:00:00@ local time -- cannot be parsed. This is the moment Standard Railway Time went live. -- Concretely, PostgreSQL will emit @1883-11-18 12:03:57-04:56:02@ -- instead of @1883-11-18 11:59:59-05@ when the @timezone@ parameter -- for the connection is set to @America/New_York@. -- -- 2. Dates and times surrounding @1582-Feb-24@, the date the Gregorian -- Calendar was introduced, should be investigated for conversion errors. -- -- 3. Points in time Before Christ are not also not supported. For example, -- PostgreSQL will emit @0045-01-01 BC@ for a value of a @date@ type. -- This is the year that the Julian Calendar was adopted. -- -- However, it should be noted that the old parsers also had issues 1 and 3. -- Also, the new parsers now correctly handle time zones that include minutes -- in their offset. Most notably, this includes all of India and parts of -- Canada and Australia. -- -- PostgreSQL uses the zoneinfo database for its time zone information. -- You can read more about PostgreSQL's date and time types at -- , -- and zoneinfo at . -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ module Database.PostgreSQL.Simple.Time ( Unbounded(..) , Date , UTCTimestamp , ZonedTimestamp , LocalTimestamp , parseDay , parseUTCTime , parseZonedTime , parseLocalTime , parseTimeOfDay , parseDate , parseUTCTimestamp , parseZonedTimestamp , parseLocalTimestamp , dayToBuilder , utcTimeToBuilder , zonedTimeToBuilder , localTimeToBuilder , timeOfDayToBuilder , timeZoneToBuilder , dateToBuilder , utcTimestampToBuilder , zonedTimestampToBuilder , localTimestampToBuilder , unboundedToBuilder ) where import Database.PostgreSQL.Simple.Time.Implementation