This class has the following methods:
DateTime::TimeZone->new(name=>$tz_name)
Given a valid time zone name, this method returns a new time zone blessed into the appropriate subclass.
Subclasses are named for the given time zone, so that the time zone "America/Chicago" is the
DateTime::TimeZone::America::Chicago class.
If the name given is a "link" name in the Olson database, the object created may have a different name.
For example, there is a link from the old "EST5EDT" name to "America/New_York".
When loading a time zone from the Olson database, the constructor checks the version of the loaded class
to make sure it matches the version of the current DateTime::TimeZone installation. If they do not match
it will issue a warning. This is useful because time zone names may fall out of use, but you may have an
old module file installed for that time zone.
There are also several special values that can be given as names.
If the "name" parameter is "floating", then a "DateTime::TimeZone::Floating" object is returned. A
floating time zone does not have any offset, and is always the same time. This is useful for calendaring
applications, which may need to specify that a given event happens at the same local time, regardless of
where it occurs. See RFC 2445 <https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2445.txt> for more details.
If the "name" parameter is "UTC", then a "DateTime::TimeZone::UTC" object is returned.
If the "name" is an offset string, it is converted to a number, and a "DateTime::TimeZone::OffsetOnly"
object is returned.
The"local"timezone
If the "name" parameter is "local", then the module attempts to determine the local time zone for the
system.
The method for finding the local zone varies by operating system. See the appropriate module for details
of how we check for the local time zone.
• DateTime::TimeZone::Local::Unix
• DateTime::TimeZone::Local::Android
• DateTime::TimeZone::Local::hpux
• DateTime::TimeZone::Local::Win32
• DateTime::TimeZone::Local::VMS
If a local time zone is not found, then an exception will be thrown. This exception will always stringify
to something containing the text "Cannot determine local time zone".
If you are writing code for users to run on systems you do not control, you should try to account for the
possibility that this exception may be thrown. Falling back to UTC might be a reasonable alternative.
When writing tests for your modules that might be run on others' systems, you are strongly encouraged to
either not use "local" when creating DateTime objects or to set $ENV{TZ} to a known value in your test
code. All of the per-OS classes check this environment variable.
$tz->offset_for_datetime($dt)
Given a "DateTime" object, this method returns the offset in seconds for the given datetime. This takes
into account historical time zone information, as well as Daylight Saving Time. The offset is determined
by looking at the object's UTC Rata Die days and seconds.
$tz->offset_for_local_datetime($dt)
Given a "DateTime" object, this method returns the offset in seconds for the given datetime. Unlike the
previous method, this method uses the local time's Rata Die days and seconds. This should only be done
when the corresponding UTC time is not yet known, because local times can be ambiguous due to Daylight
Saving Time rules.
$tz->is_dst_for_datetime($dt)
Given a "DateTime" object, this method returns true if the DateTime is currently in Daylight Saving Time.
$tz->name
Returns the name of the time zone.
$tz->short_name_for_datetime($dt)
Given a "DateTime" object, this method returns the "short name" for the current observance and rule this
datetime is in. These are names like "EST", "GMT", etc.
It is strongly recommended that you do not rely on these names for anything other than display. These
names are not official, and many of them are simply the invention of the Olson database maintainers.
Moreover, these names are not unique. For example, there is an "EST" at both -0500 and +1000/+1100.
$tz->is_floating
Returns a boolean indicating whether or not this object represents a floating time zone, as defined by
RFC 2445 <https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2445.txt>.
$tz->is_utc
Indicates whether or not this object represents the UTC (GMT) time zone.
$tz->has_dst_changes
Indicates whether or not this zone has ever had a change to and from DST, either in the past or future.
$tz->is_olson
Returns true if the time zone is a named time zone from the Olson database.
$tz->category
Returns the part of the time zone name before the first slash. For example, the "America/Chicago" time
zone would return "America".
DateTime::TimeZone->is_valid_name($name)
Given a string, this method returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the string is a valid time
zone name. If you are using "DateTime::TimeZone::Alias", any aliases you've created will be valid.
DateTime::TimeZone->all_names
This returns a pre-sorted list of all the time zone names. This list does not include link names. In
scalar context, it returns an array reference, while in list context it returns an array.
DateTime::TimeZone->categories
This returns a list of all time zone categories. In scalar context, it returns an array reference, while
in list context it returns an array.
DateTime::TimeZone->links
This returns a hash of all time zone links, where the keys are the old, deprecated names, and the values
are the new names. In scalar context, it returns a hash reference, while in list context it returns a
hash.
DateTime::TimeZone->names_in_category($category)
Given a valid category, this method returns a list of the names in that category, without the category
portion. So the list for the "America" category would include the strings "Chicago",
"Kentucky/Monticello", and "New_York". In scalar context, it returns an array reference, while in list
context it returns an array.
DateTime::TimeZone->countries()
Returns a sorted list of all the valid country codes (in lower-case) which can be passed to
names_in_country(). In scalar context, it returns an array reference, while in list context it returns an
array.
If you need to convert country codes to names or vice versa you can use "Locale::Country" to do so. Note
that one of the codes returned is "uk", which is an alias for the country code "gb", and is not a valid
ISO country code.
DateTime::TimeZone->names_in_country($country_code)
Given a two-letter ISO3166 country code, this method returns a list of time zones used in that country.
The country code may be of any case. In scalar context, it returns an array reference, while in list
context it returns an array.
This list is returned in an order vaguely based on geography and population. In general, the least used
zones come last, but there are not guarantees of a specific order from one release to the next. This
order is probably the best option for presenting zones names to end users.
DateTime::TimeZone->offset_as_seconds($offset)
Given an offset as a string, this returns the number of seconds represented by the offset as a positive
or negative number. Returns "undef" if $offset is not in the range "-99:59:59" to "+99:59:59".
The offset is expected to match either "/^([\+\-])?(\d\d?):(\d\d)(?::(\d\d))?$/" or
"/^([\+\-])?(\d\d)(\d\d)(\d\d)?$/". If it doesn't match either of these, "undef" will be returned.
This means that if you want to specify hours as a single digit, then each element of the offset must be
separated by a colon (:).
DateTime::TimeZone->offset_as_string($offset,$sep)
Given an offset as a number, this returns the offset as a string. Returns "undef" if $offset is not in
the range -359999 to 359999.
You can also provide an optional separator which will go between the hours, minutes, and seconds (if
applicable) portions of the offset.
StorableHooks
This module provides freeze and thaw hooks for "Storable" so that the huge data structures for Olson time
zones are not actually stored in the serialized structure.
If you subclass "DateTime::TimeZone", you will inherit its hooks, which may not work for your module, so
please test the interaction of your module with Storable.