Postgres will parse the time part after the decimal point to a double, then multiply by 1 million, then round to an integer. This can lead to some strange behaviour:
ghci> query conn "select (?)::timestamptz" (Only (UTCTime (fromGregorian 1970 1 1) 0.0000025)) :: IO [Only UTCTime]
[Only {fromOnly = 1970-01-01 00:00:00.000002 UTC}]
That one appears to round down, but this one appears to round up
ghci> query conn "select (?)::timestamptz" (Only (UTCTime (fromGregorian 1970 1 1) 0.5187445)) :: IO [Only UTCTime]
[Only {fromOnly = 1970-01-01 00:00:00.518745 UTC}]
because
ghci> ((0.5187445 :: Double) * (1000000 :: Double))
518744.50000000006
Arguably ToField UTCTime shouldn't exist, since it can't really fit into a timestamptz. But that's probably not an acceptable breaking change so what else could be done about this? Maybe instance ToField UTCTime should truncate to microseconds?
Postgres will parse the time part after the decimal point to a double, then multiply by 1 million, then round to an integer. This can lead to some strange behaviour:
That one appears to round down, but this one appears to round up
because
Arguably
ToField UTCTimeshouldn't exist, since it can't really fit into atimestamptz. But that's probably not an acceptable breaking change so what else could be done about this? Maybeinstance ToField UTCTimeshould truncate to microseconds?