Advertisement
Advertisement
⚡ Community Insights
Discussion Sentiment
40% Positive
Analyzed from 903 words in the discussion.
Trending Topics
#timezone#appointment#store#utc#date#local#unix#authoritative#british#columbia
Discussion Sentiment
Analyzed from 903 words in the discussion.
Trending Topics
Discussion (22 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
Past events: UTC timestamp.
What format should you use? Human readable strings for longterm storage, because when things go wonky, it’s easier to debug.
Note: nothing stops you from optimizing for queries by adding a field to store (or using a calculated index for) the integer epoch offset (e.g. unix timestamps), just make sure you know which field is authoritative.
I prefer to leave all the time conversions to software, wherein you only use battle tested libraries, and never do it by hand.
Timezones are just too fraught with peril to try and do it on your own.
Edit: changed some words to make clearer what I was saying.
A appointment with your dentist at 2pm Pacific Time in December 2026 has changed Unix timestamps in British Columbia. The dentist doesn't care about the Unix timestamp, she cares about the wall clock local time when you arrive for the appointment.
I don't understand this. The consumer books in his/ her local time stamp i.e. 12 PM pacific. Gets stored as Epoch milliseconds (and is passed around as a data structure i.e. Date struct with UTC as the timezone) and the providers sees the time stamp 3 PM EST or 2 PM CST depending on it's timezone at runtime (interface the provider it works with).
I don't understand why a specific timezone has to be "authoritative" here. What am I missing.
Between the time of booking and the time of the appointment, the government changed what timezone there will be at the time of the appointment. If you calculated the Unix timestamp at the time of booking using the old laws, by the time of the appointment the Unix timestamp would be off by an hour.
If the consumer booked something for 12PM Dec 1 2026 PST, and this booking was made before BC's changes were announced, and the provider saved this using their local time (say EST), then they would have saved it as 3PM EST. But now with BC's changes, when the consumer shows up at 12PM their time, that will be 2PM EST, an hour before the provider was expecting.
Was the consumer correct for showing up at the booked time according to their wall clock, or is the provider correct with their saved the time that was an hour later? The answer probably depends, but whichever you choose is the authoritative time.
This is the exact reason people store time in local time zones.
Also remember the date/time where DST switching occurs is entirely timezone-specific, and it's not necessarily the same pattern every year (as demonstrated with British Columbia).
So you set the time to 10pm UTC to match 2pm British Columbia. But because the timezone for BC has changed that 10pm now matches 3pm in British Columbia
So the Dentist is expecting you at 2pm and you come along at 3pm
That caveat aside: good.
Also, I have yet to encounter this problem. For personal events, I sleep during this time. For company events, we always avoid this time.
Once I decide on the best way to publish releases and cleanup the docs, I'll put out a ShowHN post, but the current version seems to be working for the basic use cases, and people are welcome to try it out if you don't mind a the work of cloning the repo and running the relevant commands!
Also, I've often picked a random city in Pacific time when setting timezones on hosts, so I guess it's going to cause me some headaches in the fall.