TimeZone

Description GTimeZone is a structure that represents a time zone, at no particular point in time. It is refcounted and immutable. A time zone contains a number of intervals. Each interval has an abbreviation to describe it, an offet to UTC and a flag indicating if the daylight savings time is in effect during that interval. A time zone always has at least one interval -- interval 0. Every UTC time is contained within exactly one interval, but a given local time may be contained within zero, one or two intervals (due to incontinuities associated with daylight savings time). An interval may refer to a specific period of time (eg: the duration of daylight savings time during 2010) or it may refer to many periods of time that share the same properties (eg: all periods of daylight savings time). It is also possible (usually for political reasons) that some properties (like the abbreviation) change between intervals without other properties changing. GTimeZone is available since GLib 2.26.

Constructors

this
this(GTimeZone* gTimeZone)

Sets our main struct and passes it to the parent class

this
this(string identifier)

Creates a GTimeZone corresponding to identifier. identifier can either be an RFC3339/ISO 8601 time offset or something that would pass as a valid value for the TZ environment variable (including NULL). Valid RFC3339 time offsets are "Z" (for UTC) or "±hh:mm". ISO 8601 additionally specifies "±hhmm" and "±hh". The TZ environment variable typically corresponds to the name of a file in the zoneinfo database, but there are many other possibilities. Note that those other possibilities are not currently implemented, but are planned. g_time_zone_new_local() calls this function with the value of the TZ environment variable. This function itself is independent of the value of TZ, but if identifier is NULL then /etc/localtime will be consulted to discover the correct timezone. See RFC3339 §5.6 for a precise definition of valid RFC3339 time offsets (the time-offset expansion) and ISO 8601 for the full list of valid time offsets. See The GNU C Library manual for an explanation of the possible values of the TZ environment variable. You should release the return value by calling g_time_zone_unref() when you are done with it. Since 2.26

Members

Functions

adjustTime
int adjustTime(GTimeType type, long time)

Finds an interval within tz that corresponds to the given time, possibly adjusting time if required to fit into an interval. The meaning of time depends on type. This function is similar to g_time_zone_find_interval(), with the difference that it always succeeds (by making the adjustments described below). In any of the cases where g_time_zone_find_interval() succeeds then this function returns the same value, without modifying time. This function may, however, modify time in order to deal with non-existent times. If the non-existent local time of 02:30 were requested on March 13th 2010 in Toronto then this function would adjust time to be 03:00 and return the interval containing the adjusted time. Since 2.26

doref
TimeZone doref()

Increases the reference count on tz. Since 2.26

findInterval
int findInterval(GTimeType type, long time)

Finds an the interval within tz that corresponds to the given time. The meaning of time depends on type. If type is G_TIME_TYPE_UNIVERSAL then this function will always succeed (since universal time is monotonic and continuous). Otherwise time is treated is local time. The distinction between G_TIME_TYPE_STANDARD and G_TIME_TYPE_DAYLIGHT is ignored except in the case that the given time is ambiguous. In Toronto, for example, 01:30 on November 7th 2010 occured twice (once inside of daylight savings time and the next, an hour later, outside of daylight savings time). In this case, the different value of type would result in a different interval being returned. It is still possible for this function to fail. In Toronto, for example, 02:00 on March 14th 2010 does not exist (due to the leap forward to begin daylight savings time). -1 is returned in that case. Since 2.26

getAbbreviation
string getAbbreviation(int interval)

Determines the time zone abbreviation to be used during a particular interval of time in the time zone tz. For example, in Toronto this is currently "EST" during the winter months and "EDT" during the summer months when daylight savings time is in effect. Since 2.26

getOffset
int getOffset(int interval)

Determines the offset to UTC in effect during a particular interval of time in the time zone tz. The offset is the number of seconds that you add to UTC time to arrive at local time for tz (ie: negative numbers for time zones west of GMT, positive numbers for east). Since 2.26

getStruct
void* getStruct()

the main Gtk struct as a void*

getTimeZoneStruct
GTimeZone* getTimeZoneStruct()
Undocumented in source. Be warned that the author may not have intended to support it.
isDst
int isDst(int interval)

Determines if daylight savings time is in effect during a particular interval of time in the time zone tz. Since 2.26

unref
void unref()

Decreases the reference count on tz. Since 2.26

Variables

gTimeZone
GTimeZone* gTimeZone;

the main Gtk struct

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