Automate schema migrations using DizzleORM and GitHub Actions - Manage thousands of tenants with this workflow

PostgreSQL DATE_PART() Function

Summary: in this tutorial, you will learn how to use the PostgreSQL DATE_PART() function to retrieve the subfields such as year, month, and week from a date or time value.

Introduction to the PostgreSQL DATE_PART() function

The DATE_PART() function allows you to extract a subfield from a date or time value.

The following illustrates the basic syntax for the DATE_PART() function:

DATE_PART(field, source)

The DATE_PART() function has two optional parameters field and source. The field is an identifier that determines what to extract from the source.

The values of the field must be one of the following permitted values:

  • century
  • decade
  • year
  • month
  • day
  • hour
  • minute
  • second
  • microseconds
  • milliseconds
  • dow
  • doy
  • epoch
  • isodow
  • isoyear
  • timezone
  • timezone_hour
  • timezone_minute

The source is a temporal expression that evaluates to TIMESTAMP, TIME, or INTERVAL. If the source evaluates to DATE, the function will be cast to TIMESTAMP.

The DATE_PART() function returns a value whose type is double precision.

PostgreSQL DATE_PART() function examples

Let’s explore some examples of using the DATE_PART() function.

1) Basic PostgreSQL DATE_PART() function example

The following example uses the DATE_PART() function to extract the century from a timestamp:

SELECT date_part('century',TIMESTAMP '2017-01-01');

Output:

date_part
-----------
        21
(1 row)

2) Extracting the year from a timestamp

To extract the year from the same timestamp, you pass the year to the field argument:

SELECT date_part('year',TIMESTAMP '2017-01-01');

Output:

date_part
-----------
      2017
(1 row)

3) Extracting the quarter from a timestamp

The following example uses the DATE_PART() function to extract the quarter from a timestamp:

SELECT date_part('quarter',TIMESTAMP '2017-01-01');

Output:

date_part
-----------
         1
(1 row)

4) Extracting month from a timestamp

The following example uses the DATE_PART() function to extract the month from a timestamp:

SELECT date_part('month',TIMESTAMP '2017-09-30');

Output:

date_part
-----------
         9
(1 row)

5) Extracting a decade from a timestamp

The following example uses the DATE_PART() function to extract the decade from a timestamp:

SELECT date_part('decade',TIMESTAMP '2017-09-30');

Output:

date_part
-----------
       201
(1 row)

6) Extracting a week number from a timestamp

To extract the week number from a time stamp, you pass the week as the first argument:

SELECT date_part('week',TIMESTAMP '2017-09-30');

Output:

date_part
-----------
        39
(1 row)

7) Extracting a week number from a timestamp

To get the current millennium, you use the DATE_PART() function with the NOW() function as follows:

SELECT date_part('millennium',now());

Output:

date_part
-----------
         3
(1 row)

8) Extracting day from a timestamp

To extract the day part from a timestamp, you pass the day string to the DATE_PART() function:

SELECT date_part('day',TIMESTAMP '2017-03-18 10:20:30');

Output:

date_part
-----------
        18
(1 row)

9) Extracting hour, minute, and second from a timestamp

To extract the hour, minute, and second, from a time stamp, you pass the corresponding value hour, minute, and second to the DATE_PART() function:

SELECT date_part('hour',TIMESTAMP '2017-03-18 10:20:30') h,
       date_part('minute',TIMESTAMP '2017-03-18 10:20:30') m,
       date_part('second',TIMESTAMP '2017-03-18 10:20:30') s;

Output:

h  | m  | s
----+----+----
 10 | 20 | 30
(1 row)

10) Extracting hour, minute, and second from a timestamp

To extract the day of the week and or day of the year from a time stamp, you use the dow and doy arguments:

SELECT date_part('dow',TIMESTAMP '2017-03-18 10:20:30') dow,
       date_part('doy',TIMESTAMP '2017-03-18 10:20:30') doy;

Output:

dow | doy
-----+-----
   6 |  77
(1 row)

Summary

  • Use the PostgreSQL DATE_PART() function to extract a subfield of a timestamp.

Last updated on

Was this page helpful?