I feel like the main answer is still not so clear, and it's worth taking the time to understand time and timezones.
The most important thing to understand when dealing with time is that time is relative!
2017-08-30 13:23:00
: (a naive datetime), represents a local time somewhere in the world, but note that 2017-08-30 13:23:00
in London is NOT THE SAME TIME as 2017-08-30 13:23:00
in San Francisco.
Because the same time string can be interpreted as different points-in-time depending on where you are in the world, there is a need for an absolute notion of time.
A UTC timestamp is a number in seconds (or milliseconds) from Epoch (defined as 1 January 1970 00:00:00
at GMT
timezone +00:00 offset).
Epoch is anchored on the GMT timezone and therefore is an absolute point in time. A UTC timestamp being an offset from an absolute time therefore defines an absolute point in time.
This makes it possible to order events in time.
Without timezone information, time is relative, and cannot be converted to an absolute notion of time without providing some indication of what timezone the naive datetime should be anchored to.
What are the types of time used in computer system?
naive datetime: usually for display, in local time (i.e. in the browser) where the OS can provide timezone information to the program.
UTC timestamps: A UTC timestamp is an absolute point in time, as mentioned above, but it is anchored in a given timezone, so a UTC timestamp can be converted to a datetime in any timezone, however it does not contain timezone information. What does that mean? That means that 1504119325 corresponds to 2017-08-30T18:55:24Z
, or 2017-08-30T17:55:24-0100
or also 2017-08-30T10:55:24-0800
. It doesn't tell you where the datetime recorded is from. It's usually used on the server side to record events (logs, etc...) or used to convert a timezone aware datetime to an absolute point in time and compute time differences.
ISO-8601 datetime string: The ISO-8601 is a standardized format to record datetime with timezone. (It's in fact several formats, read on here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601) It is used to communicate timezone aware datetime information in a serializable manner between systems.
When to use which? or rather when do you need to care about timezones?
If you need in any way to care about time-of-day, you need timezone information. A calendar or alarm needs time-of-day to set a meeting at the correct time of the day for any user in the world. If this data is saved on a server, the server needs to know what timezone the datetime corresponds to.
To compute time differences between events coming from different places in the world, UTC timestamp is enough, but you lose the ability to analyze at what time of day events occured (ie. for web analytics, you may want to know when users come to your site in their local time: do you see more users in the morning or the evening? You can't figure that out without time of day information.
Timezone offset in a date string:
Another point that is important, is that timezone offset in a date string is not fixed. That means that because 2017-08-30T10:55:24-0800
says the offset -0800
or 8 hours back, doesn't mean that it will always be!
In the summer it may well be in daylight saving time, and it would be -0700
What that means is that timezone offset (+0100) is not the same as timezone name (Europe/France) or even timezone designation (CET)
America/Los_Angeles
timezone is a place in the world, but it turns into PST
(Pacific Standard Time) timezone offset notation in the winter, and PDT
(Pacific Daylight Time) in the summer.
So, on top of getting the timezone offset from the datestring, you should also get the timezone name to be accurate.
Most packages will be able to convert numeric offsets from daylight saving time to standard time on their own, but that is not necessarily trivial with just offset. For example WAT
timezone designation in West Africa, is UTC+0100 just like CET
timezone in France, but France observes daylight saving time, while West Africa does not (because they're close to the equator)
So, in short, it's complicated. VERY complicated, and that's why you should not do this yourself, but trust a package that does it for you, and KEEP IT UP TO DATE!
then.strftime('%s')
that expects local time but the timestamp indicates thatdatetime(2008, 1, 1)
is in UTC. – jfs