Have picked up someone's code and this is a part of a where clause, anyone know what the double colon indicates?
b.date_completed > a.dc::date + INTERVAL '1 DAY 7:20:00'
It varies based on RDBMS, but if I guess right, that's PostgreSQL, in which case the :: converts a.dc to a date type of date.
::
a.dc
date
In other flavors...
In MS SQL Server 2000:
For built-in user-defined functions that return a table, the function name must be specified with a leading double colon (::) to distinguish it from user-defined functions that are not built-in. It also must be specified as a one-part name with no database or owner qualifications. For example: SELECT * FROM ::fn_helpcollations() b.. For built-in user-defined functions that return a scalar value, the function name must be specified as a one-part name (do not specify database or owner). Do not specify a leading double colon (::).
In MS SQL Server 2005:
Double-colons are no longer required for UDFs that return a table.
However...
Double-colons are required in SQL Server 2005 when granting permissions on schemas, certificates, endpoints, and a few other securables.
As well as...
When using User-Defined Types, static methods of the type must be called using the double-colon syntax.
Sources: BOL and Kalen Delaney's Blog
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