Hello!
I was confused in the problem of time zones. I am writing a web application that will contain some news with dates of publication, and I want the client to see the date of publication of the news in the form of corresponding local time. However, I do not know in which time zone the client is located.
I have three questions.
I have to ask just in case: does DateTimeOffset.UtcNow
always returns the correct UTC date and time, regardless of whether the server is dependent on daylight savings time? For example, if the first time I get the value of this property for two minutes before daylight savings time (or before the transition from daylight saving time back) and the second time in 2 minutes after the transfer, whether the value of properties in all cases differ by only 4 minutes? Or here require any further logic? (Question #1)
Please see the following example and tell me what you think.
I posted the news on the site. I assume that DateTimeOffset.UtcNow
takes into account the time zone of the server and the daylight savings time, and so I immediately get the correct UTC server time when pressing the button "Submit". I write this value to a MS SQL database in the field of type datetime2(0).
Then the user opens a page with news and no matter how long after publication. This may occur even after many years. I did not ask him to enter his time zone. Instead, I get the offset of his current local time from UTC using the javascript function following way:
function GetUserTimezoneOffset()
{
var offset = new Date().getTimezoneOffset();
return offset;
}
Next I make the calculation of the date and time of publication, which will show the user:
public static DateTime Get_Publication_Date_In_User_Local_DateTime(
DateTime Publication_Utc_Date_Time_From_DataBase,
int User_Time_Zone_Offset_Returned_by_Javascript)
{
int userTimezoneOffset = User_Time_Zone_Offset_Returned_by_Javascript; // For
// example Javascript returns a value equal to -300, which means the
// current user's time differs from UTC to 300 minutes. Ie offset
// is UTC +6. In this case, it may be the time zone UTC +5 which
// currently operates summer time or UTC +6 which currently operates the
// standard time.
// Right? (Question #2)
DateTimeOffset utcPublicationDateTime =
new DateTimeOffset(Publication_Utc_Date_Time_From_DataBase,
TimeSpan.Zero); // get an instance of type DateTimeOffset for the
// date and time of publication for further calculations
DateTimeOffset publication_DateTime_In_User_Local_DateTime =
utcPublicationDateTime.ToOffset(new TimeSpan(0, - userTimezoneOffset, 0));
return publication_DateTime_In_User_Local_DateTime.DateTime;// return to user
}
Is the value obtained correct? Is this the right approach to solving this problem? (Question #3)
UPDATED Oct 19 at 6:58 (I tried post it as a comment but it's too long by 668 characters)
Matt Johnson, Thank You for such a detailed answer despite that of the fact that you are doing this not the first time. Thank you for taking the time to explain this particular case, and not just provide links to other posts.
I have read the information that you have provided. Maybe I'm still not fully aware of all the details, but if I understand it right, for the right convertion of DateTime (which was written many years ago in the database) from UTC to the same user's moment, I need to know UTC offset which he had at that moment. And it is difficult taking into account that transfer rules for DST change constantly. And even now, though the platform ".NET" contains some TZDB that is used for the TimeZoneInfo type, I can't take advantage of it without the exact position of the user.
But what if I am only interested in the date and time of starting this year, and only in Russia, where DST was canceled in 2011? As I understand it, this means that if properly configured clock on user's computer, located in Russia, this approach will always give the correct result. And since 2011, the offset to UTC of user's clock should always be the same. Accordingly, the shift indicators in different browsers will not be different for the Russian user's.