A normalization to DB timezone : TIMESTAMP « Data Type « Oracle PL / SQL

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Oracle PL / SQL » Data Type » TIMESTAMP 
A normalization to DB timezone
    

SQL>
SQL> DECLARE
  2
  3      v1  DATE;
  4      v2  TIMESTAMP;                 
  5      v3  TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE;  
  6      v4  TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE;  
  7
  8  BEGIN
  9
 10  
 11      v4 := TIMESTAMP '2002-11-03 03:00:00 -07:00';
 12      dbms_output.put_line(v4);
 13
 14  END;
 15  /
03-NOV-02 02.00.00.000000 AM

PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.

SQL>
SQL>

   
    
    
    
  
Related examples in the same category
1. Define a TIMESTAMP variable with a default null or initialized value
2. Two timestamp subtypes demonstrate similar behaviors. Their prototypes are
3. system timestamp
4. timestamp procedure member variable
5. timestamp type column
6. versions between timestamp minvalue and maxvalue
7. Difference between the DATE and TIMESTAMP datatypes:
8. Insert sysdate value to timestamp type column
9. TIMESTAMP Value WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE
10. TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE
11. TIMESTAMP literal
12. TIMESTAMP literal supports Time Zone (as offset from UTC). Default is SESSION Timezone
13. TIMESTAMP(3)
14. The TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE datatype stores the date/time
15. The TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE datatype stores the date/time
16. Define and set timestamp value
17. Demonstrate the new ANSI Timestamp literal. Use 0-9 digits for fractional seconds
18. Create a table with two columns, Use Datatypes: TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE and TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE
19. Retrieve the timestamp into a variable
20. Assign current_timestamp to timestamp type variable
21. gets the date a little more exact
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