PostgreSQL TO_CHAR() Function
The PostgreSQL TO_CHAR()
function converts a timestamp, an interval, an integer, a double-precision, or a numeric value to a string.
Syntax
The following illustrates the syntax of the PostgreSQL TO_CHAR()
function:
Arguments
The PostgreSQL TO_CHAR()
function requires two arguments:
1) expression
The expression can be a timestamp, an interval, an integer, a double-precision, or a numeric value that is converted to a string according to a specific format.
2) format
The format for the result string.
The following table illustrates the valid numeric format strings:
Format | Description |
---|---|
9 | Numeric value with the specified number of digits |
0 | Numeric value with leading zeros |
. (period) | decimal point |
D | decimal point that uses the locale |
, (comma) | group (thousand) separator |
FM | Fill mode, which suppresses padding blanks and leading zeroes. |
PR | Negative value in angle brackets. |
S | Sign anchored to a number that uses locale |
L | Currency symbol that uses locale |
G | Group separator that uses locale |
MI | Minus sign in the specified position for numbers that are less than 0. |
PL | Plus sign in the specified position for numbers that are greater than 0. |
SG | Plus / minus sign in the specified position |
RN | Roman numeral that ranges from 1 to 3999 |
TH or th | Upper case or lower case ordinal number suffix |
The following table shows the valid timestamp format strings:
Pattern | Description |
---|---|
Y,YYY | year in 4 digits with comma |
YYYY | year in 4 digits |
YYY | The last 3 digits of ISO 8601 week-numbering year |
YY | last 3 digits of the year |
Y | last 2 digits of the year |
IYYY | ISO 8601 week-numbering year (4 or more digits) |
IYY | The last 2 digits of ISO 8601 week-numbering year |
IY | The last digit of ISO 8601 week-numbering year |
I | Abbreviated lowercase month name e.g., Jan, feb, etc. |
BC, bc, AD or ad | Era indicator without periods |
B.C., b.c., A.D. or a.d. | Era indicator with periods |
MONTH | English month name in uppercase |
Month | Full capitalized English month name |
month | Full lowercase English month name |
MON | Abbreviated uppercase month name e.g., JAN, FEB, etc. |
Mon | Week number of the year (1-53) (the first week starts on the first day of the year) |
mon | Abbreviated capitalized month name e.g., Jan, Feb, etc. |
MM | month number from 01 to 12 |
DAY | Full uppercase day name |
Day | Full capitalized day name |
day | Full lowercase day name |
DY | Abbreviated uppercase day name |
Dy | Abbreviated capitalized day name |
dy | Abbreviated lowercase day name |
DDD | Day of year (001-366) |
IDDD | Day of ISO 8601 week-numbering year (001-371; day 1 of the year is Monday of the first ISO week) |
DD | Day of month (01-31) |
D | Day of the week, Sunday (1) to Saturday (7) |
ID | ISO 8601 day of the week, Monday (1) to Sunday (7) |
W | Week of month (1-5) (the first week starts on the first day of the month) |
WW | Century e.g., 21, 22, etc. |
IW | Week number of ISO 8601 week-numbering year (01-53; the first Thursday of the year is in week 1) |
CC | Century e.g, 21, 22, etc. |
J | Julian Day (integer days since November 24, 4714 BC at midnight UTC) |
RM | Month in upper case Roman numerals (I-XII; > |
rm | Month in lowercase Roman numerals (i-xii; > |
HH | Hour of day (0-12) |
HH12 | Hour of day (0-12) |
HH24 | Hour of day (0-23) |
MI | Minute (0-59) |
SS | Second (0-59) |
MS | Millisecond (000-999) |
US | Microsecond (000000-999999) |
SSSS | Seconds past midnight (0-86399) |
AM, am, PM or pm | Meridiem indicator (without periods) |
A.M., a.m., P.M. or p.m. | Meridiem indicator (with periods) |
Return value
The TO_CHAR()
function returns a string in TEXT
data type that represents the first argument formatted according to the specified format.
Examples
We will use the payment
table in the sample database for the demonstration.
1) Converting a timestamp to a string example
The following statement uses the TO_CHAR()
function to format the payment date that consists of hours, minutes, and seconds:
Here is the result:
2) Converting an entire timestamp value into a different format example
The following example converts the payment date into a different format:
The output is:
3) Converting a timestamp literal to a string example
The following statement converts a timestamp literal to a string:
The result is:
4) Adding currency symbol to the amount example
The following example adds US dollar to the paid amounts:
The following picture illustrates the output:
5) Converting an integer to a string example
The following example converts an integer to a string:
Result
6) Putting it all together example
The following example converts a numeric and timestamp to a string:
The result is
Summary
- Use the PostgreSQL
TO_CHAR()
function to convert a timestamp or a numeric value to a string.