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Home/ Questions/Q 885035
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T12:50:34+00:00 2026-05-15T12:50:34+00:00

I am using the following code in my controller: @monday = (Time.now).at_beginning_of_week @friday =

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I am using the following code in my controller:

  @monday = (Time.now).at_beginning_of_week

  @friday = 5.days.since(@monday)-1.second

  @sent_emails = ContactEmail.all(:conditions => ['date_sent >= ? and date_sent <= ?', @monday, @friday])

Although it works fine on my local sqlite, I have an “operator does not exist timestamp without timezone = integer” error.

I’m not exactly clear what to change.

Ideas?

Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T12:50:34+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 12:50 pm

    Your parameters @monday and @friday are wrong, these have to be of type “timestamp without time zone” but are created as integers, see the errormessage. SQLite doesn’t have any datetime-datatypes, so dates are stored as text or integers (unix-timestamps). This is why you don’t get an errormessage in SQLite.

    Make sure you create timestamps like ‘2004-10-19 10:23:54’ and you will be fine. Another option could be the PostgreSQL-function to_timestamp() to convert your unix-timestamp to a timestamp:

    @sent_emails = ContactEmail.all(:conditions => ['date_sent >= to_timestamp(?) and date_sent <= to_timestamp(?)', @monday, @friday])
    
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