Postgres and Open Source Experts

24x7x365 since 1997

Education

Professional Postgres and Open Source support

Command Prompt, Inc., is the oldest Postgres Company in North America and one of the oldest Open Source firms still operating today. We serve our clients with best in class expertise and professionalism. You can read more about support and services here:


You have landed at the largest single source of Postgres education blogs in the world. At Command Prompt, we believe deeply that the education of the community is critical to the continued success of Postgres and related technologies. We hope you find content you are looking for and don't hesitate to Contact us today for all your Postgres and Open Source consulting and support needs.

PostgreSQL Not equal to (!=) Operator

The NOT EQUAL operator is one of the comparison operators that check if the input values are equal or not. It is symbolized as “!=” or “<>”.

How to Convert Timestamp to Date in PostgreSQL

Postgres offers various ways to convert a TIMESTAMP to a DATE, such as TO_CHAR() function, CAST operator, EXTRACT function, etc.

How to Get the Unix Timestamp in PostgreSQL

To get the Unix Timestamp in PostgreSQL, the EXTRACT() and DATE_PART() functions are used with the EPOCH argument.

How to Query Arrays in PostgreSQL

To query the ARRAY data in Postgres, the SELECT statement is used. Postgres allows us to query the data of an entire array or a specific array index.

How to Query Date and Time in PostgreSQL

In PostgreSQL, different built-in functions are used along with the SELECT statement to query date and time. This blog post explained how to query date and time in Postgres using suitable examples.

PostgreSQL DELETE USING Statement - Drop Duplicate Rows

In Postgres, the COUNT() function finds duplicate records. While the “DELETE USING” statement drops the duplicates.

Configuring Binary Replication with pgBackRest

PostgreSQL has two forms of native replication: logical replication and binary replication. Logical replication offers tuple-by-tuple changes streamed from a primary server to a secondary server. Binary replication, also known as physical replication, sends changes at a disk block level.

Binary replication allows for backing up an entire database and recovering it to a specific point in time, called point-in-time-recovery (PITR). PostgreSQL accomplishes this by using a write-ahead log (WAL), which details the transactions that occur. This tutorial provides a guide for implementing binary replication between a primary and secondary server.

Executing Citus Across Nodes for PostgreSQL

Welcome back to our Citus blog series! So far in this series, we have installed and configured the Citus extension for PostgreSQL. Now that we are up and running, it is time to distribute some data.

Let’s begin by inserting some sample data for demonstration purposes. First, we need a table in which to put the data.

How to Use REPEAT() Function in PostgreSQL

The REPEAT() function in Postgres is a string function that retrieves a string consisting of the given string repeated an ‘n’ number of times.

How to Get a Day From a Date in PostgreSQL

To get a day from a date, specify the “Day” as the first argument and a specific date, timestamp, or interval as the second argument to the EXTRACT().