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[5.44.169.188]) by smtp.googlemail.com with ESMTPSA id d6-20020a056512320600b0047196449b7fsm1266532lfe.92.2022.04.21.09.59.18 (version=TLS1_3 cipher=TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 bits=128/128); Thu, 21 Apr 2022 09:59:19 -0700 (PDT) Content-Language: en-US In-Reply-To: <507cc0a2-d2d9-4283-7cc2-0da3c6510ac8@cs.ucla.edu> X-BeenThere: debbugs-submit@debbugs.gnu.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.18 Precedence: list X-BeenThere: bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org List-Id: "Bug reports for GNU Emacs, the Swiss army knife of text editors" List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , Errors-To: bug-gnu-emacs-bounces+geb-bug-gnu-emacs=m.gmane-mx.org@gnu.org Original-Sender: "bug-gnu-emacs" Xref: news.gmane.io gmane.emacs.bugs:230392 Archived-At: On 17/04/2022 02:23, Paul Eggert wrote: > On 4/15/22 10:23, Max Nikulin wrote: > >> if you are storing future events bound to wall time then namely time >> zone identifier should have precedence. > > Although that would make sense for some applications it's not a good > idea in general. For example, if you're scheduling a Zoom meeting you > should save both, because other meeting participants may interpret > strings like "Pacific/Apia" differently. I would say that in such cases there is a primary time zone for such event and secondary time zones of other participants. Time transitions in the primary time zone (unless it is UTC that is the reference) affect participants from all other time zones. If some secondary time zone is changed then it affects only wall time in this particular time zone. So primary timezone and offsets in all time zones should be stored for user convenience and to figure out which notification should be sent after introducing new rules for some time zones. >> Just identifier may be ambiguous around DST transition. So timezone >> abbreviations are ambiguous per se but when identifiers are known they >> may be still necessary to resolve uncertainties for backward time >> shifts. At certain moment the Olson DB started to use "+04" >> abbreviations instead of letters for transitions unrelated to daylight >> saving time. > > Yes, timezone names like "Europe/Lisbon" are ambiguous during fallback > transitions, or if the meaning of "Europe/Lisbon" changes. This is why > one should also save UT offsets when generating localtime timestamps. Before/after time transition around the date may be more meaningful for people. Local tradition may use other reference than Greenwich. > Around five years ago I changed TZDB to numeric use time zone > abbreviations like "+04" instead of my inventions like "GET", because I > wanted TZDB to follow existing practice, not invent it. A nice side > effect is that numeric abbreviations are unambiguous. (Besides, even _I_ > couldn't remember what "GET" meant. :-) Numerical abbreviation broke parsers in stable linux distribution, e.g. a patch for Qt required in addition to tzdata update. I do not remember details, but removed old-style abbreviations caused some problems as well. I may be wrong concerning usage of such abbreviation in the postgres parser and earlier generated text timestamps. On the other hand an abbreviation for a timezone with evolved offset significantly contributes to uncertainties and does not help to resolve ambiguity around time shift. >> And WET/WEST gets another bit of info in addition to numerical offset. > > That info is meant only for users; I wouldn't rely on it for > calculations because those abbreviations are ambiguous. It could well > be, for example that the meaning of "PST" in the United States will > change in the near future. I agree that abbreviations are ambiguous when considered globally. When constrained to particular location (time zone) and moment of time, they may provide additional bit of information that is more convenient for users and enough to resolve ambiguity. It is not a general rule, sometimes uncertainty remains even when abbreviation is known. >> I do not remember if it is possible at all to obtain using libc the >> period of constant time offset, when time shift value is valid. >> Sometimes it is necessary to recalculate offset. > > Sorry, I don't understand this point. One can easily recalculate the UT > offset in Emacs Lisp by generating the desired timestamp and calling > decode-time on it. You surely are talking about something else, but I > don't know what it is. Let's assume Europe/Lisbon timezone. `decode-time' for today gives just +0100. It tells nothing if I need to process some thousands of timestamps for yesterday and past week. If some function returns "+0100 for given timestamp and the same offset is valid for Europe/Lisbon since Sun Mar 27 01:00:00 2022 UT = Sun Mar 27 02:00:00 2022 WEST till Sun Oct 30 00:59:59 2022 UT = Sun Oct 30 01:59:59 2022 WEST" then I can process whole bunch without any worry concerning non-existing or ambiguous time, extra or lost hour in time intervals. mktime should have all this information during intermediate calculations but it does not expose it to callers. Interface of mktime is suitable for conversion of isolated timestamps. For bunch of related data there is enough room for optimizing. >> You wrote that "2021-01-31 23:30:00 +0300" is parsed correctly. My >> opinion is that when time zone is known to be Africa/Juba (system-wide >> setting, environment variable, or an argument of the parsing function) >> then "2021-01-31 23:30:00 CAT" and "2021-01-31 23:30:00 EAT" should be >> parsed correctly (and localized date-time formats should be parsed as >> well). > > That's not possible in general, since the two abbreviations can be the > same. Traditionally in Australia, for example, "CST" meant both "Central > Standard Time" and "Central Summer Time", and there are probably still > apps that use the equivalent of TZ="CST-9:30CST,M10.1.0,M4.1.0/3" which > does precisely that. They should still have some way to disambiguate whether local time precedes transition or follows it in various schedules: night trains, buses, flights. However it might be just "*" and a footnote. > It's hardly ever a good idea to rely on time zone abbreviations as > they're too often ambiguous. It's much better to use UT offsets. When > generating a localtime timestamp, one should always output its UT offset > (in addition to any other advisory info you might want to output). And > if you do that, many of the abovementioned problems are easily solved. There is no general rule suitable for all cases. In some cases it is more convenient to store timestamps as seconds since epoch. However there are cases when it is fragile: dates without time (e.g. birth date in documents, not for astrology) or future events. Actually input data should be clearly marked to distinguish from guessed or derived values. If wall time is what exactly known then UTC offset is secondary data. When presented to users, UTC offset may sometimes add unnecessary noise with no real value. I do not dispute that UTC offset is important, I am just trying to say that sometimes it may be inconvenient in usage. To build agenda view aside from DST and over transitions and assuming no travel across time zones, all calculations may be performed without inspecting of UTC offset.