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  2. ISO 8601 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601

    For example, the 6th day of the 1st month of the year 2009 may be written as "2009-01-06" in the extended format or as "20090106" in the basic format without ambiguity. For reduced precision , [ 18 ] any number of values may be dropped from any of the date and time representations, but in the order from the least to the most significant.

  3. Ion (serialization format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_(Serialization_format)

    timestamp: Date/time/time zone moments of arbitrary precision; symbol: Unicode symbolic atoms (aka identifiers) blob: Binary data of user-defined encoding; clob: Text data of user-defined encoding; sexp: Ordered collections of values with application-defined semantics

  4. PL/SQL - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PL/SQL

    The time may be left out, but there is no way to define a variable that only contains the time. There is no DATETIME type. And there is a TIME type. But there is no TIMESTAMP type that can contain fine-grained timestamp up to millisecond or nanosecond. The TO_DATE function can be used to convert strings to date values. The function converts the ...

  5. Timestamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timestamp

    The term "timestamp" derives from rubber stamps used in offices to stamp the current date, and sometimes time, in ink on paper documents, to record when the document was received. Common examples of this type of timestamp are a postmark on a letter or the "in" and "out" times on a time card .

  6. Unix time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_time

    Unix time [a] is a date and time representation widely used in computing. It measures time by the number of non-leap seconds that have elapsed since 00:00:00 UTC on 1 January 1970, the Unix epoch. For example, at midnight on 1 January 2010, Unix time was 1262304000. Unix time originated as the system time of Unix operating systems.

  7. Epoch (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epoch_(computing)

    Software timekeeping systems vary widely in the resolution of time measurement; some systems may use time units as large as a day, while others may use nanoseconds.For example, for an epoch date of midnight UTC (00:00) on 1 January 1900, and a time unit of a second, the time of the midnight (24:00) between 1 January 1900 and 2 January 1900 is represented by the number 86400, the number of ...

  8. Dimension (data warehouse) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimension_(data_warehouse)

    One of the reasons to have date dimensions is to place calendar knowledge in the data warehouse instead of hard-coded in an application. While a simple SQL date-timestamp is useful for providing accurate information about the time a fact was recorded, it can not give information about holidays, fiscal periods, etc. An SQL date-timestamp can ...

  9. Timestamp-based concurrency control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timestamp-based...

    In this case, if the transaction's timestamp is after the object's read timestamp, the read timestamp is set to the transaction's timestamp. If a transaction wants to write to an object, but the transaction started before the object's read timestamp it means that something has had a look at the object, and we assume it took a copy of the object ...