Timezone Specifiers
Certain Time
methods accept arguments that specify timezones:
-
Time.at: keyword argument
in:
. -
Time.new: positional argument
zone
or keyword argumentin:
. -
Time.now: keyword argument
in:
. -
Time#getlocal: positional argument
zone
. -
Time#localtime: positional argument
zone
.
The value given with any of these must be one of the following (each detailed below):
Hours/Minutes Offsets
The zone value may be a string offset from UTC in the form '+HH:MM'
or '-HH:MM'
, where:
-
HH
is the 2-digit hour in the range0..23
. -
MM
is the 2-digit minute in the range0..59
.
Examples:
t = Time.utc(2000, 1, 1, 20, 15, 1) # => 2000-01-01 20:15:01 UTC
Time.at(t, in: '-23:59') # => 1999-12-31 20:16:01 -2359
Time.at(t, in: '+23:59') # => 2000-01-02 20:14:01 +2359
Single-Letter Offsets
The zone value may be a letter in the range 'A'..'I'
or 'K'..'Z'
; see List of military time zones:
t = Time.utc(2000, 1, 1, 20, 15, 1) # => 2000-01-01 20:15:01 UTC
Time.at(t, in: 'A') # => 2000-01-01 21:15:01 +0100
Time.at(t, in: 'I') # => 2000-01-02 05:15:01 +0900
Time.at(t, in: 'K') # => 2000-01-02 06:15:01 +1000
Time.at(t, in: 'Y') # => 2000-01-01 08:15:01 -1200
Time.at(t, in: 'Z') # => 2000-01-01 20:15:01 UTC
Integer Offsets
The zone value may be an integer number of seconds in the range -86399..86399
:
t = Time.utc(2000, 1, 1, 20, 15, 1) # => 2000-01-01 20:15:01 UTC
Time.at(t, in: -86399) # => 1999-12-31 20:15:02 -235959
Time.at(t, in: 86399) # => 2000-01-02 20:15:00 +235959
Timezone Objects
The zone value may be an object responding to certain timezone methods, an instance of Timezone and TZInfo for example.
The timezone methods are:
-
local_to_utc
:-
Called when Time.new is invoked with
tz
as the value of positional argumentzone
or keyword argumentin:
. -
Argument: a Time-like object.
-
Returns: a Time-like object in the UTC timezone.
-
-
utc_to_local
:-
Called when Time.at or Time.now is invoked with
tz
as the value for keyword argumentin:
, and when Time#getlocal or Time#localtime is called withtz
as the value for positional argumentzone
. -
Argument: a Time-like object.
-
Returns: a Time-like object in the local timezone.
-
A custom timezone class may have these instance methods, which will be called if defined:
-
abbr
:-
Called when Time#strftime is invoked with a format involving
%Z
. -
Argument: a Time-like object.
-
Returns: a string abbreviation for the timezone name.
-
-
dst?
:-
Called when Time.at or Time.now is invoked with
tz
as the value for keyword argumentin:
, and when Time#getlocal or Time#localtime is called withtz
as the value for positional argumentzone
. -
Argument: a Time-like object.
-
Returns: whether the time is daylight saving time.
-
-
name
:-
Called when
Marshal.dump(t)
is invoked -
Argument: none.
-
Returns: the string name of the timezone.
-
Time
-Like Objects
A Time
-like object is a container object capable of interfacing with timezone libraries for timezone conversion.
The argument to the timezone conversion methods above will have attributes similar to Time, except that timezone related attributes are meaningless.
The objects returned by local_to_utc
and utc_to_local
methods of the timezone object may be of the same class as their arguments, of arbitrary object classes, or of class Integer.
For a returned class other than Integer
, the class must have the following methods:
-
year
-
mon
-
mday
-
hour
-
min
-
sec
-
isdst
-
to_i
For a returned Integer
, its components, decomposed in UTC, are interpreted as times in the specified timezone.
Timezone Names
If the class (the receiver of class methods, or the class of the receiver of instance methods) has find_timezone
singleton method, this method is called to achieve the corresponding timezone object from a timezone name.
For example, using Timezone:
class TimeWithTimezone < Time
require 'timezone'
def self.find_timezone(z) = Timezone[z]
end
TimeWithTimezone.now(in: "America/New_York") #=> 2023-12-25 00:00:00 -0500
TimeWithTimezone.new("2023-12-25 America/New_York") #=> 2023-12-25 00:00:00 -0500
Or, using TZInfo:
class TimeWithTZInfo < Time
require 'tzinfo'
def self.find_timezone(z) = TZInfo::Timezone.get(z)
end
TimeWithTZInfo.now(in: "America/New_York") #=> 2023-12-25 00:00:00 -0500
TimeWithTZInfo.new("2023-12-25 America/New_York") #=> 2023-12-25 00:00:00 -0500
You can define this method per subclasses, or on the toplevel Time class.