The enclosed patch changes the behaviour of the "ordinal" ('TH') format for

to_char.  I don't know about the rest of the world, but the "standard" in
Australia is the following:

        1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th - 9th
        10th - 19th
        21st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th - 29th (similarly for 30s - 90s)
        110th - 119th (and for all "teens")
        121st, 122nd, 123rd, 124th - 129th

I think you see the trend.  The current code works fine except that it
produces:

        111st, 112nd, 113rd, 114th - 119th
        211st, 212nd, 213rd, 214th - 219th ... and so on.

Without knowing anything about what's supported (and what isn't) in the usual
I18N libraries, should this type of behaviour be defined within the locales?

Daniel Baldoni
This commit is contained in:
Bruce Momjian 2000-06-09 03:18:34 +00:00
parent ce7746201b
commit dbf2fd2e0f
1 changed files with 7 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
/* -----------------------------------------------------------------------
* formatting.c
*
* $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/backend/utils/adt/formatting.c,v 1.10 2000/06/09 01:11:08 tgl Exp $
* $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/backend/utils/adt/formatting.c,v 1.11 2000/06/09 03:18:34 momjian Exp $
*
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1999-2000, PostgreSQL, Inc
@ -1258,14 +1258,17 @@ static char *
get_th(char *num, int type)
{
int len = strlen(num),
last;
last, seclast;
last = *(num + (len - 1));
if (!isdigit((unsigned char) last))
elog(ERROR, "get_th: '%s' is not number.", num);
/* 11 || 12 */
if (len == 2 && (last == '1' || last == '2') && *num == '1')
/*
* All "teens" (<x>1[0-9]) get 'TH/th',
* while <x>[02-9][123] still get 'ST/st', 'ND/nd', 'RD/rd', respectively
*/
if ((len > 1) && ((seclast = num[len-2]) == '1'))
last = 0;
switch (last)