Module Calendar.Timezone
- Description
-
This module contains all the predefined timezones. Index it with whatever timezone you want to use.
Example: Calendar.Calendar my_cal= Calendar.ISO->set_timezone(Calendar.Timezone["Europe/Stockholm"]);
A simpler way of selecting timezones might be to just give the string to
set_timezone
;it
indexes by itself:Calendar.Calendar my_cal= Calendar.ISO->set_timezone("Europe/Stockholm");
- Note
-
Do not confuse this module with
Ruleset.Timezone
, which is the base class of a timezone object."CET" and some other standard abbreviations work too, but not all of them (due to more then one country using them).
Do not call
set_timezone
too often, but remember the result if possible. It might take some time to initialize a timezone object.There are about 504 timezones with 127 different daylight saving rules. Most of them historic.
The timezone information comes from ftp://elsie.nci.nih.gov/pub/ and are not made up from scratch. Timezone bugs may be reported to the timezone mailing list, tz@elsie.nci.nih.gov, preferable with a cc to mirar+pike@mirar.org. /Mirar
- See also
- Constant locale
constant
Calendar.Timezone.locale
=Rule.Timezone
- Description
-
This contains the local timezone, found from various parts of the system, if possible.
- Constant localtime
constant
Calendar.Timezone.localtime
=Rule.Timezone
- Description
-
This is a special timezone, that uses localtime() and
tzname
to find out what current offset and timezone string to use.locale uses this if there is no other way of finding a better timezone to use.
This timezone is limited by localtime and libc to the range of time_t, which is a MAXINT on most systems - 13 Dec 1901 20:45:52 to 19 Jan 2038 3:14:07, UTC.