Create a table with two columns: 'timestamp with time zone', 'c2 timestamp with local time zone' : Timestamp « Date Timezone « Oracle PL / SQL

Oracle PL / SQL
1. Aggregate Functions
2. Analytical Functions
3. Char Functions
4. Constraints
5. Conversion Functions
6. Cursor
7. Data Type
8. Date Timezone
9. Hierarchical Query
10. Index
11. Insert Delete Update
12. Large Objects
13. Numeric Math Functions
14. Object Oriented Database
15. PL SQL
16. Regular Expressions
17. Report Column Page
18. Result Set
19. Select Query
20. Sequence
21. SQL Plus
22. Stored Procedure Function
23. Subquery
24. System Packages
25. System Tables Views
26. Table
27. Table Joins
28. Trigger
29. User Previliege
30. View
31. XML
Java
Java Tutorial
Java Source Code / Java Documentation
Java Open Source
Jar File Download
Java Articles
Java Products
Java by API
Photoshop Tutorials
Maya Tutorials
Flash Tutorials
3ds-Max Tutorials
Illustrator Tutorials
GIMP Tutorials
C# / C Sharp
C# / CSharp Tutorial
C# / CSharp Open Source
ASP.Net
ASP.NET Tutorial
JavaScript DHTML
JavaScript Tutorial
JavaScript Reference
HTML / CSS
HTML CSS Reference
C / ANSI-C
C Tutorial
C++
C++ Tutorial
Ruby
PHP
Python
Python Tutorial
Python Open Source
SQL Server / T-SQL
SQL Server / T-SQL Tutorial
Oracle PL/SQL Tutorial
PostgreSQL
SQL / MySQL
MySQL Tutorial
VB.Net
VB.Net Tutorial
Flash / Flex / ActionScript
VBA / Excel / Access / Word
XML
XML Tutorial
Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007 Tutorial
Microsoft Office Excel 2007 Tutorial
Microsoft Office Word 2007 Tutorial
Oracle PL / SQL » Date Timezone » Timestamp 
Create a table with two columns: 'timestamp with time zone', 'c2 timestamp with local time zone'
 
SQL>
SQL>
SQL> create table t
  2  (c1 timestamp with time zone,
  3   c2 timestamp with local time zone)
  4  /

Table created.

SQL>
SQL> insert into t (c1,c2)valuescurrent_timestamp, current_timestamp );

row created.

SQL>
SQL> select from t;
C1
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C2
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
16-JUN-08 07.01.25.376000 PM -06:00
16-JUN-08 07.01.25.376000 PM


row selected.

SQL>
SQL> alter session set time_zone = '-08:00';

Session altered.

SQL>
SQL> select from t;
C1
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C2
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
16-JUN-08 07.01.25.376000 PM -06:00
16-JUN-08 05.01.25.376000 PM


row selected.

SQL>
SQL> drop table t;

Table dropped.

SQL>
SQL> --

 
Related examples in the same category
1. TIMESTAMP specifies a precision for the SECONDS field in a TIMESTAMP column (the DATE data type can only store whole seconds).
2. Use the Timestamp data type in a table and insert data
3. Compare data and timestamp
4. INSERT statement adds a row with the TIMESTAMP keyword to supply a datetime literals
5. Use the TIMESTAMP type to define a column in a table
6. TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE type extends TIMESTAMP to allow you to store a time zone
7. TIMESTAMP(4) WITH TIME ZONE
8. Cast string to TIMESTAMP
9. Use TIMESTAMP to mark string in insert statement
10. TIMESTAMP WITH LOCAL TIME ZONE
11. Use timestamp as table column type and insert sysdate to it
www.java2java.com | Contact Us
Copyright 2009 - 12 Demo Source and Support. All rights reserved.
All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.