This package provides the IANA time zone database and time zone aware
DateTime
class, TZDateTime
.
The current Time Zone database version is 2018g. See the announcement for details.
TimeZone
objects require time zone data, so the first step is to load
one of our time zone databases.
We provide two different APIs to load a database: one for browsers and one standalone environments.
Import package:timezone/browser.dart
library and run async function
Future initializeTimeZone([String path])
.
import 'package:timezone/browser.dart';
Future<Null> setup() async {
final detroit = getLocation('America/Detroit');
final now = new TZDateTime.now(detroit);
});
Import package:timezone/standalone.dart
library and run async function
Future initializeTimeZone([String path])
.
import 'package:timezone/standalone.dart';
Future<Null> setup() async {
await initializeTimeZone();
final detroit = getLocation('America/Detroit');
final now = new TZDateTime.now(detroit);
}
By default, when library is initialized, local location will be UTC
.
To overwrite local location you can use setLocalLocation(Location location)
function.
Future<Null> setup() async {
await initializeTimeZone();
final detroit = getLocation('America/Detroit');
setLocalLocation(detroit);
}
Each location in the database represents a national region where all clocks keeping local time have agreed since 1970. Locations are identified by continent or ocean and then by the name of the location, which is typically the largest city within the region. For example, America/New_York represents most of the US eastern time zone; America/Phoenix represents most of Arizona, which uses mountain time without daylight saving time (DST); America/Detroit represents most of Michigan, which uses eastern time but with different DST rules in 1975; and other entries represent smaller regions like Starke County, Indiana, which switched from central to eastern time in 1991 and switched back in 2006.
final detroit = getLocation('America/Detroit');
We don't provide any functions to get locations by time zone abbreviations because of the ambiguities.
Alphabetic time zone abbreviations should not be used as unique identifiers for UTC offsets as they are ambiguous in practice. For example, "EST" denotes 5 hours behind UTC in English-speaking North America, but it denotes 10 or 11 hours ahead of UTC in Australia; and French-speaking North Americans prefer "HNE" to "EST".
TimeZone objects represents time zone and contains offset, DST flag, and name in the abbreviated form.
final timeInUtc = new DateTime.utc(1995, 1, 1);
final timeZone = detroit.timeZone(timeInUtc.millisecondsSinceEpoch);
The TZDateTime
class implements the DateTime
interface from dart:core
,
and contains information about location and time zone.
final date = new TZDateTime(detroit, 2014, 11, 17);
To convert between time zones, just create a new TZDateTime
object using
from
constructor and pass Location
and DateTime
to the constructor.
final localTime = new DateTime(2010, 1, 1);
final detroitTime = new TZDateTime.from(time, detroit);
This constructor supports any objects that implement DateTime
interface, so
you can pass a native DateTime
object or our TZDateTime
.
We are using IANA Time Zone Database to build our databases.
We are currently building three different database variants:
- default (doesn't contain deprecated and historical zones with some exceptions like US/Eastern). 351kb
- all (contains all data from the IANA time zone database). 433kb
- 2010-2020 (default database that contains historical data from 2010 until 2020). 86kb
Script for updating Time Zone database, it will automatically download the IANA time zone database and compile into our native format.
$ pub run tool/get -s 2014h
The argument -s
is for specifying source version.