The jOOQ User Manual : SQL building : Column expressions : Datetime functions : TIMESTAMP | previous : next |
New versions: Dev (3.15) | Latest (3.14) | 3.13 | 3.12 | 3.11 | 3.10 | 3.9 | 3.8 | Old versions: 3.7 | 3.6 | 3.5 | 3.4
TIMESTAMP
Applies to ✅ Open Source Edition ✅ Express Edition ✅ Professional Edition ✅ Enterprise Edition
Convert an ISO 8601 TIMESTAMP
string literal into a SQL TIMESTAMP
type (represented by java.sql.Timestamp).
SELECT CAST('2020-02-03 15:30:45' AS TIMESTAMP);
create.select(timestamp("2020-02-03 15:30:45")).fetch();
The result being
+---------------------+ | timestamp | +---------------------+ | 2020-02-03 15:30:45 | +---------------------+
Dialect support
This example using jOOQ:
timestamp("2020-02-03 15:30:45")
Translates to the following dialect specific expressions:
-- ACCESS #2020/02/03 15:30:45# -- ASE, SQLITE, SYBASE '2020-02-03 15:30:45.0' -- CUBRID DATETIME '2020-02-03 15:30:45.0' -- DB2, FIREBIRD, H2, HSQLDB, INGRES, MARIADB, ORACLE, POSTGRES TIMESTAMP '2020-02-03 15:30:45.0' -- MYSQL {ts '2020-02-03 15:30:45.0'} -- SQLSERVER CAST('2020-02-03 15:30:45.0' AS DATETIME2) -- AURORA_MYSQL, AURORA_POSTGRES, BIGQUERY, COCKROACHDB, DERBY, EXASOL, HANA, IGNITE, INFORMIX, MEMSQL, REDSHIFT, SNOWFLAKE, -- SQLDATAWAREHOUSE, TERADATA, VERTICA /* UNSUPPORTED */
(These are currently generated with jOOQ 3.15, see #10141)
Feedback
Do you have any feedback about this page? We'd love to hear it!