Note:
In earlier releases, theTO_DSINTERVAL
function accepted an optional nlsparam
clause. This clause is still accepted for backward compatibility, but has no effect.TO_DSINTERVAL
converts a character string of CHAR
, VARCHAR2
, NCHAR
, or NVARCHAR2
data type to an INTERVAL
DAY
TO
SECOND
type.
TO_DSINTERVAL
accepts argument in one of the two formats:
SQL interval format compatible with the SQL standard (ISO/IEC 9075:2003)
ISO duration format compatible with the ISO 8601:2004 standard
In the SQL format, days
is an integer between 0 and 999999999, hours
is an integer between 0 and 23, and minutes
and seconds
are integers between 0 and 59. frac_secs
is the fractional part of seconds between .0 and .999999999. One or more blanks separate days from hours. Additional blanks are allowed between format elements.
In the ISO format, days
, hours
, minutes
and seconds
are integers between 0 and 999999999. frac_secs
is the fractional part of seconds between .0 and .999999999. No blanks are allowed in the value. If you specify T
, then you must specify at least one of the hours
, minutes
, or seconds
values.
The following example uses the SQL format to select from the hr.employees
table the employees who had worked for the company for at least 100 days on November 1, 2002:
SELECT employee_id, last_name FROM employees WHERE hire_date + TO_DSINTERVAL('100 00:00:00') <= DATE '2002-11-01' ORDER BY employee_id; EMPLOYEE_ID LAST_NAME ----------- --------------- 102 De Haan 203 Mavris 204 Baer 205 Higgins 206 Giet
The following example uses the ISO format to display the timestamp 100 days and 5 hours after the beginning of the year 2009:
SELECT TO_CHAR(TIMESTAMP '2009-01-01 00:00:00' + TO_DSINTERVAL('P100DT05H'), 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS') "Time Stamp" FROM DUAL; Time Stamp ------------------- 2009-04-11 05:00:00