Don't miss your chance to take the Fabric Data Engineer (DP-600) exam for FREE! Find out how by attending the DP-600 session on April 23rd (pacific time), live or on-demand.
Learn moreNext up in the FabCon + SQLCon recap series: The roadmap for Microsoft SQL and Maximizing Developer experiences in Fabric. All sessions are available on-demand after the live show. Register now
Hi, I'm pulling some data (our warehouse forklifts usage metrics) from PostGre SQL database having no previous experience with epoch date & time formats.
Can someone tell me how to convert following columns into human readable data either with SQL or with Power Query transformations? Especially "Unix Hour Begin" and "Duration" columns.
Here is what I'm pulling in Power Query using PostGreSQL connector and SQL statement:
Here is how it looks like in the database:
Solved! Go to Solution.
You can convert from Unix Hour Begin to a regular date with
#datetimezone(1970,1,1,0,0,0,0,0)+#duration(0,[Unix Hour Begin],0,0)
(this is based on UTC, so you then need to convert into local time).
Awesome! Thanks a ton, it's really working.
Any idea how to do the same in sql code?
something along these lines
sql - PostgreSQL: how to convert from Unix epoch to date? - Stack Overflow
You can convert from Unix Hour Begin to a regular date with
#datetimezone(1970,1,1,0,0,0,0,0)+#duration(0,[Unix Hour Begin],0,0)
(this is based on UTC, so you then need to convert into local time).
If you have recently started exploring Fabric, we'd love to hear how it's going. Your feedback can help with product improvements.
A new Power BI DataViz World Championship is coming this June! Don't miss out on submitting your entry.
Share feedback directly with Fabric product managers, participate in targeted research studies and influence the Fabric roadmap.
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 6 | |
| 3 | |
| 3 | |
| 3 | |
| 2 |