QTimeZone Class
QTimeZone identifies how a time representation relates to UTC. More...
Header: | #include <QTimeZone> |
CMake: | find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Core) target_link_libraries(mytarget PRIVATE Qt6::Core) |
qmake: | QT += core |
Note: All functions in this class are thread-safe.
Public Types
struct | OffsetData |
enum | Initialization { LocalTime, UTC } |
enum | NameType { DefaultName, LongName, ShortName, OffsetName } |
OffsetDataList | |
enum | TimeType { StandardTime, DaylightTime, GenericTime } |
enum | anonymous { MinUtcOffsetSecs, MaxUtcOffsetSecs } |
Public Functions
QTimeZone() | |
QTimeZone(QTimeZone::Initialization spec) | |
QTimeZone(int offsetSeconds) | |
QTimeZone(const QByteArray &ianaId) | |
QTimeZone(const QByteArray &zoneId, int offsetSeconds, const QString &name, const QString &abbreviation, QLocale::Territory territory = QLocale::AnyTerritory, const QString &comment = QString()) | |
QTimeZone(const QTimeZone &other) | |
QTimeZone(QTimeZone &&other) | |
~QTimeZone() | |
QString | abbreviation(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const |
QTimeZone | asBackendZone() const |
QString | comment() const |
int | daylightTimeOffset(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const |
QString | displayName(const QDateTime &atDateTime, QTimeZone::NameType nameType = QTimeZone::DefaultName, const QLocale &locale = QLocale()) const |
QString | displayName(QTimeZone::TimeType timeType, QTimeZone::NameType nameType = QTimeZone::DefaultName, const QLocale &locale = QLocale()) const |
int | fixedSecondsAheadOfUtc() const |
bool | hasDaylightTime() const |
bool | hasTransitions() const |
QByteArray | id() const |
bool | isDaylightTime(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const |
bool | isUtcOrFixedOffset() const |
bool | isValid() const |
QTimeZone::OffsetData | nextTransition(const QDateTime &afterDateTime) const |
QTimeZone::OffsetData | offsetData(const QDateTime &forDateTime) const |
int | offsetFromUtc(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const |
QTimeZone::OffsetData | previousTransition(const QDateTime &beforeDateTime) const |
int | standardTimeOffset(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const |
void | swap(QTimeZone &other) |
QLocale::Territory | territory() const |
Qt::TimeSpec | timeSpec() const |
CFTimeZoneRef | toCFTimeZone() const |
NSTimeZone * | toNSTimeZone() const |
QTimeZone::OffsetDataList | transitions(const QDateTime &fromDateTime, const QDateTime &toDateTime) const |
bool | operator!=(const QTimeZone &other) const |
QTimeZone & | operator=(const QTimeZone &other) |
QTimeZone & | operator=(QTimeZone &&other) |
bool | operator==(const QTimeZone &other) const |
Static Public Members
QList<QByteArray> | availableTimeZoneIds() |
QList<QByteArray> | availableTimeZoneIds(QLocale::Territory territory) |
QList<QByteArray> | availableTimeZoneIds(int offsetSeconds) |
QTimeZone | fromCFTimeZone(CFTimeZoneRef timeZone) |
QTimeZone | fromDurationAheadOfUtc(std::chrono::seconds offset) |
QTimeZone | fromNSTimeZone(const NSTimeZone *timeZone) |
QTimeZone | fromSecondsAheadOfUtc(int offset) |
QTimeZone | fromStdTimeZonePtr(const int *timeZone) |
QByteArray | ianaIdToWindowsId(const QByteArray &ianaId) |
bool | isTimeZoneIdAvailable(const QByteArray &ianaId) |
bool | isUtcOrFixedOffset(Qt::TimeSpec spec) |
QTimeZone | systemTimeZone() |
QByteArray | systemTimeZoneId() |
QTimeZone | utc() |
QByteArray | windowsIdToDefaultIanaId(const QByteArray &windowsId) |
QByteArray | windowsIdToDefaultIanaId(const QByteArray &windowsId, QLocale::Territory territory) |
QList<QByteArray> | windowsIdToIanaIds(const QByteArray &windowsId) |
QList<QByteArray> | windowsIdToIanaIds(const QByteArray &windowsId, QLocale::Territory territory) |
Detailed Description
When dates and times are combined, the meaning of the result depends on how time is being represented. There are various international standards for representing time; one of these, UTC, corresponds to the traditional standard of solar mean time at Greenwich (a.k.a. GMT). All other time systems supported by Qt are ultimately specified in relation to UTC. An instance of this class provides a stateless calculator for conversions between UTC and other time representations.
Some time representations are simply defined at a fixed offset to UTC. Others are defined by governments for use within their jurisdictions. The latter are properly known as time zones, but QTimeZone (since Qt 6.5) is unifies their representation with that of general time systems. One time zone generally supported on most operating systems is designated local time; this is presumed to correspond to the time zone within which the user is living.
For time zones other than local time, UTC and those at fixed offsets from UTC, Qt can only provide support when the operating system provides some way to access that information. When Qt is built, the timezone
feature controls whether such information is available. When it is not, some constructors and methods of QTimeZone are excluded from its API; these are documented as depending on feature timezone
. Note that, even when Qt is built with this feature enabled, it may be unavailable to users whose systems are misconfigured, or where some standard packages (for example, the tzdata
package on Linux) are not installed. This feature is enabled by default when time zone information is available.
This class is primarily designed for use in QDateTime; most applications will not need to access this class directly and should instead use an instance of it when constructing a QDateTime.
Note: For consistency with QDateTime, QTimeZone does not account for leap seconds.
Remarks
QTimeZone, like QDateTime, measures offsets from UTC in seconds. This contrasts with their measurement of time generally, which they do in milliseconds. Real-world time zones generally have UTC offsets that are whole-number multiples of five minutes (300 seconds), at least since well before 1970. A positive offset from UTC gives a time representation puts noon on any given day before UTC noon on that day; a negative offset puts noon after UTC noon on the same day.
Lightweight Time Representations
QTimeZone can represent UTC, local time and fixed offsets from UTC even when feature timezone
is disabled. The form in which it does so is also available when the feature is enabled; it is a more lightweight form and processing using it will typically be more efficient, unless methods only available when feature timezone
is enabled are being exercised. See Initialization and QTimeZone::fromSecondsAheadOfUtc(int) for how to construct these representations.
This documentation distinguishes between "time zone", used to describe a time representation described by system-supplied or standard information, and time representations more generally, which include these lightweight forms. The methods available only when feature timezone
is enabled are apt to be cheaper for time zones than for lightweight time representations, for which these methods may construct a suitable transient time zone object to which to forward the query.
IANA Time Zone IDs
QTimeZone uses the IANA time zone IDs as defined in the IANA Time Zone Database (http://www.iana.org/time-zones). This is to ensure a standard ID across all supported platforms. Most platforms support the IANA IDs and the IANA Database natively, but for Windows a mapping is required to the native IDs. See below for more details.
The IANA IDs can and do change on a regular basis, and can vary depending on how recently the host system data was updated. As such you cannot rely on any given ID existing on any host system. You must use availableTimeZoneIds() to determine what IANA IDs are available.
The IANA IDs and database are also know as the Olson IDs and database, named after the original compiler of the database.
UTC Offset Time Zones
A default UTC time zone backend is provided which is always available when feature timezone
is enabled. This provides a set of generic Offset From UTC time zones in the range UTC-14:00 to UTC+14:00. These time zones can be created using either the standard ISO format names, such as "UTC+00:00", as listed by availableTimeZoneIds(), or using a name of similar form in combination with the number of offset seconds.
Windows Time Zones
Windows native time zone support is severely limited compared to the standard IANA TZ Database. Windows time zones cover larger geographic areas and are thus less accurate in their conversions. They also do not support as much historical data and so may only be accurate for the current year. In particular, when MS's zone data claims that DST was observed prior to 1900 (this is historically known to be untrue), the claim is ignored and the standard time (allegedly) in force in 1900 is taken to have always been in effect.
QTimeZone uses a conversion table derived from the Unicode CLDR data to map between IANA IDs and Windows IDs. Depending on your version of Windows and Qt, this table may not be able to provide a valid conversion, in which "UTC" will be returned.
QTimeZone provides a public API to use this conversion table. The Windows ID used is the Windows Registry Key for the time zone which is also the MS Exchange EWS ID as well, but is different to the Time Zone Name (TZID) and COD code used by MS Exchange in versions before 2007.
Note: When Qt is built with the ICU library, it is used in preference to the Windows system APIs, bypassing all problems with those APIs using different names.
System Time Zone
The method systemTimeZoneId() returns the current system IANA time zone ID which on Unix-like systems will always be correct. On Windows this ID is translated from the Windows system ID using an internal translation table and the user's selected country. As a consequence there is a small chance any Windows install may have IDs not known by Qt, in which case "UTC" will be returned.
Creating a new QTimeZone instance using the system time zone ID will only produce a fixed named copy of the time zone, it will not change if the system time zone changes. QTimeZone::systemTimeZone() will return an instance representing the zone named by this system ID. Note that constructing a QDateTime using this system zone may behave differently than constructing a QDateTime that uses Qt::LocalTime as its Qt::TimeSpec, as the latter directly uses system APIs for accessing local time information, which may behave differently (and, in particular, might adapt if the user adjusts the system zone setting).
Time Zone Offsets
The difference between UTC and the local time in a time zone is expressed as an offset in seconds from UTC, i.e. the number of seconds to add to UTC to obtain the local time. The total offset is comprised of two component parts, the standard time offset and the daylight-saving time offset. The standard time offset is the number of seconds to add to UTC to obtain standard time in the time zone. The daylight-saving time offset is the number of seconds to add to the standard time offset to obtain daylight-saving time (abbreviated DST and sometimes called "daylight time" or "summer time") in the time zone. The usual case for DST (using standard time in winter, DST in summer) has a positive daylight-saving time offset. However, some zones have negative DST offsets, used in winter, with summer using standard time.
Note that the standard and DST offsets for a time zone may change over time as countries have changed DST laws or even their standard time offset.
License
This class includes data obtained from the CLDR data files under the terms of the Unicode Data Files and Software License. See Unicode Common Locale Data Repository (CLDR) for details.
See also QDateTime and QCalendar.
Member Type Documentation
[since 6.5]
enum QTimeZone::Initialization
The type of the simplest lightweight time representations.
This enumeration identifies a type of lightweight time representation to pass to a QTimeZone constructor, where no further data are required. They correspond to the like-named members of Qt::TimeSpec.
Constant | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
QTimeZone::LocalTime | 0 | This time representation corresponds to the one implicitly used by system functions using time_t and struct tm value to map between local time and UTC time. |
QTimeZone::UTC | 1 | This time representation, Coordinated Universal Time, is the base representation to which civil time is referred in all supported time representations. It is defined by the International Telecommunication Union. |
This enum was introduced or modified in Qt 6.5.
enum QTimeZone::NameType
The type of time zone name.
Constant | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
QTimeZone::DefaultName | 0 | The default form of the time zone name, e.g. LongName, ShortName or OffsetName |
QTimeZone::LongName | 1 | The long form of the time zone name, e.g. "Central European Time" |
QTimeZone::ShortName | 2 | The short form of the time zone name, usually an abbreviation, e.g. "CET" |
QTimeZone::OffsetName | 3 | The standard ISO offset form of the time zone name, e.g. "UTC+01:00" |
This type is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
QTimeZone::OffsetDataList
Synonym for QList<OffsetData>.
This type is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
enum QTimeZone::TimeType
The type of time zone time, for example when requesting the name. In time zones that do not apply DST, all three values may return the same result.
Constant | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
QTimeZone::StandardTime | 0 | The standard time in a time zone, i.e. when Daylight-Saving is not in effect. For example when formatting a display name this will show something like "Pacific Standard Time". |
QTimeZone::DaylightTime | 1 | A time when Daylight-Saving is in effect. For example when formatting a display name this will show something like "Pacific daylight-saving time". |
QTimeZone::GenericTime | 2 | A time which is not specifically Standard or Daylight-Saving time, either an unknown time or a neutral form. For example when formatting a display name this will show something like "Pacific Time". |
This type is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
enum QTimeZone::anonymous
This enumeration provides constants bounding the range of plausible timezone offsets from UTC, measured in seconds. Sane UTC offsets range from -14 to +14 hours. No known zone has offset > 12 hrs West of Greenwich (Baker Island, USA). No known zone has offset > 14 hrs East of Greenwich (Kiritimati, Christmas Island, Kiribati). Note that there are zones whose offsets differ by more than a day.
Constant | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
QTimeZone::MinUtcOffsetSecs | -14 * 3600 | -14 * 3600, |
QTimeZone::MaxUtcOffsetSecs | +14 * 3600 | +14 * 3600 |
Member Function Documentation
[static, since 6.5]
QTimeZone QTimeZone::fromDurationAheadOfUtc(std::chrono::seconds offset)
[static, since 6.5]
QTimeZone QTimeZone::fromSecondsAheadOfUtc(int offset)
Returns a time representation at a fixed offset, in seconds, ahead of UTC.
The offset from UTC must be in the range -14 hours to +14 hours otherwise an invalid time zone will be returned. The returned QTimeZone is a lightweight time representation, not a time zone (backed by system-supplied or standard data).
If the offset is 0, the timeSpec() of the returned instance will be Qt::UTC. Otherwise, if offset is valid, timeSpec() is Qt::OffsetFromUTC. An invalid time zone, when returned, has Qt::TimeZone as its timeSpec().
This function was introduced in Qt 6.5.
See also QTimeZone(int), asBackendZone(), and fixedSecondsAheadOfUtc().
QTimeZone::QTimeZone()
Create a null/invalid time zone instance.
[since 6.5]
QTimeZone::QTimeZone(QTimeZone::Initialization spec)
Creates a lightweight instance describing UTC or local time.
This function was introduced in Qt 6.5.
See also fromSecondsAheadOfUtc(), asBackendZone(), utc(), and systemTimeZone().
[explicit]
QTimeZone::QTimeZone(int offsetSeconds)
Creates a time zone instance with the given offset, offsetSeconds, from UTC.
The offsetSeconds from UTC must be in the range -14 hours to +14 hours otherwise an invalid time zone will be returned.
This constructor is only available when feature timezone
is enabled. The returned instance is equivalent to the lightweight time representation QTimeZone::fromSecondsAfterUtc(offsetSeconds)
, albeit implemented as a time zone.
[explicit]
QTimeZone::QTimeZone(const QByteArray &ianaId)
Creates a time zone instance with the requested IANA ID ianaId.
The ID must be one of the available system IDs or a valid UTC-with-offset ID, otherwise an invalid time zone will be returned.
This constructor is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also availableTimeZoneIds().
QTimeZone::QTimeZone(const QByteArray &zoneId, int offsetSeconds, const QString &name, const QString &abbreviation, QLocale::Territory territory = QLocale::AnyTerritory, const QString &comment = QString())
Creates a custom time zone instance at fixed offset from UTC.
The returned time zone has an ID of zoneId and an offset from UTC of offsetSeconds. The name will be the name used by displayName() for the LongName, the abbreviation will be used by displayName() for the ShortName and by abbreviation(), and the optional territory will be used by territory(). The comment is an optional note that may be displayed in a GUI to assist users in selecting a time zone.
The zoneId must not be one of the available system IDs returned by availableTimeZoneIds(). The offsetSeconds from UTC must be in the range -14 hours to +14 hours.
If the custom time zone does not have a specific territory then set it to the default value of QLocale::AnyTerritory.
This constructor is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also id(), offsetFromUtc(), displayName(), abbreviation(), territory(), and comment().
QTimeZone::QTimeZone(const QTimeZone &other)
Copy constructor: copy other to this.
QTimeZone::QTimeZone(QTimeZone &&other)
Move constructor of this from other.
QTimeZone::~QTimeZone()
Destroys the time zone.
QString QTimeZone::abbreviation(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const
Returns the time zone abbreviation at the given atDateTime. The abbreviation may change depending on DST or even historical events.
Note that the abbreviation is not guaranteed to be unique to this time zone and should not be used in place of the ID or display name.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also displayName().
[since 6.5]
QTimeZone QTimeZone::asBackendZone() const
Converts this QTimeZone to one whose timeSpec() is Qt::TimeZone.
In all cases, the result's timeSpec() is Qt::TimeZone. When this QTimeZone's timeSpec() is Qt::TimeZone, this QTimeZone itself is returned.
If timeSpec() is Qt::UTC, QTimeZone::utc() is returned. If it is Qt::OffsetFromUTC then QTimeZone(int) is passed its offset and the result is returned.
If timeSpec() is Qt::LocalTime then an instance of the current system time zone will be returned. This will not change to reflect any subsequent change to the system time zone. It represents the local time that was in effect when asBackendZone() was called.
When using a lightweight time representation - local time, UTC time or time at a fixed offset from UTC - using methods only supported when feature timezone
is enabled may be more expensive than using a corresponding time zone. This method maps a lightweight time representation to a corresponding time zone - that is, an instance based on system-supplied or standard data.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
This function was introduced in Qt 6.5.
See also QTimeZone(QTimeZone::Initialization) and fromSecondsAheadOfUtc().
[static]
QList<QByteArray> QTimeZone::availableTimeZoneIds()
Returns a list of all available IANA time zone IDs on this system.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also isTimeZoneIdAvailable().
[static]
QList<QByteArray> QTimeZone::availableTimeZoneIds(QLocale::Territory territory)
Returns a list of all available IANA time zone IDs for a given territory.
As a special case, a territory of AnyTerritory selects those time zones that have no kown territorial association, such as UTC. If you require a list of all time zone IDs for all territories then use the standard availableTimeZoneIds() method.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also isTimeZoneIdAvailable() and territory().
[static]
QList<QByteArray> QTimeZone::availableTimeZoneIds(int offsetSeconds)
Returns a list of all available IANA time zone IDs with a given standard time offset of offsetSeconds.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also isTimeZoneIdAvailable().
QString QTimeZone::comment() const
Returns any comment for the time zone.
A comment may be provided by the host platform to assist users in choosing the correct time zone. Depending on the platform this may not be localized.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
int QTimeZone::daylightTimeOffset(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const
Returns the daylight-saving time offset at the given atDateTime, i.e. the number of seconds to add to the standard time offset to obtain the local daylight-saving time.
For example, for the time zone "Europe/Berlin" the DST offset is +3600 seconds. During standard time daylightTimeOffset() will return 0, and when daylight-saving is in effect it will return +3600.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also offsetFromUtc() and standardTimeOffset().
QString QTimeZone::displayName(const QDateTime &atDateTime, QTimeZone::NameType nameType = QTimeZone::DefaultName, const QLocale &locale = QLocale()) const
Returns the localized time zone display name at the given atDateTime for the given nameType in the given locale. The nameType and locale requested may not be supported on all platforms, in which case the best available option will be returned.
If the locale is not provided then the application default locale will be used.
The display name may change depending on DST or historical events.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also abbreviation().
QString QTimeZone::displayName(QTimeZone::TimeType timeType, QTimeZone::NameType nameType = QTimeZone::DefaultName, const QLocale &locale = QLocale()) const
Returns the localized time zone display name for the given timeType and nameType in the given locale. The nameType and locale requested may not be supported on all platforms, in which case the best available option will be returned.
If the locale is not provided then the application default locale will be used.
Where the time zone display names have changed over time then the most recent names will be used.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also abbreviation().
[constexpr, since 6.5]
int QTimeZone::fixedSecondsAheadOfUtc() const
For a lightweight time representation whose timeSpec() is Qt::OffsetFromUTC, this returns the fixed offset from UTC that it describes. For any other time representation it returns 0, even if that time representation does have a constant offset from UTC.
This function was introduced in Qt 6.5.
[static]
QTimeZone QTimeZone::fromCFTimeZone(CFTimeZoneRef timeZone)
Constructs a new QTimeZone containing a copy of the CFTimeZone timeZone.
See also toCFTimeZone().
[static]
QTimeZone QTimeZone::fromNSTimeZone(const NSTimeZone *timeZone)
Constructs a new QTimeZone containing a copy of the NSTimeZone timeZone.
See also toNSTimeZone().
[static, since 6.4]
QTimeZone QTimeZone::fromStdTimeZonePtr(const int *timeZone)
Returns a QTimeZone object representing the same time zone as timeZone. The IANA ID of timeZone must be one of the available system IDs, otherwise an invalid time zone will be returned.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
This function was introduced in Qt 6.4.
bool QTimeZone::hasDaylightTime() const
Returns true
if the time zone has practiced daylight-saving at any time.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also isDaylightTime() and daylightTimeOffset().
bool QTimeZone::hasTransitions() const
Returns true
if the system backend supports obtaining transitions.
Transitions are changes in the time-zone: these happen when DST turns on or off and when authorities alter the offsets for the time-zone.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also nextTransition(), previousTransition(), and transitions().
[static]
QByteArray QTimeZone::ianaIdToWindowsId(const QByteArray &ianaId)
Returns the Windows ID equivalent to the given ianaId.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also windowsIdToDefaultIanaId() and windowsIdToIanaIds().
QByteArray QTimeZone::id() const
Returns the IANA ID for the time zone.
IANA IDs are used on all platforms. On Windows these are translated from the Windows ID into the best match IANA ID for the time zone and territory.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
bool QTimeZone::isDaylightTime(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const
Returns true
if daylight-saving was in effect at the given atDateTime.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also hasDaylightTime() and daylightTimeOffset().
[static]
bool QTimeZone::isTimeZoneIdAvailable(const QByteArray &ianaId)
Returns true
if a given time zone ianaId is available on this system.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also availableTimeZoneIds().
[static constexpr, since 6.5]
bool QTimeZone::isUtcOrFixedOffset(Qt::TimeSpec spec)
Returns true
if spec is Qt::UTC or Qt::OffsetFromUTC.
This function was introduced in Qt 6.5.
[constexpr, since 6.5]
bool QTimeZone::isUtcOrFixedOffset() const
Returns true
if timeSpec() is Qt::UTC or Qt::OffsetFromUTC.
When it is true, the time description does not change over time, such as having seasonal daylight-saving changes, as may happen for local time or a time zone. Knowing this may save the calling code to need for various other checks.
This function was introduced in Qt 6.5.
bool QTimeZone::isValid() const
Returns true
if this time zone is valid.
QTimeZone::OffsetData QTimeZone::nextTransition(const QDateTime &afterDateTime) const
Returns the first time zone Transition after the given afterDateTime. This is most useful when you have a Transition time and wish to find the Transition after it.
If there is no transition after the given afterDateTime then an invalid OffsetData will be returned with an invalid QDateTime.
The given afterDateTime is exclusive.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also hasTransitions(), previousTransition(), and transitions().
QTimeZone::OffsetData QTimeZone::offsetData(const QDateTime &forDateTime) const
Returns the effective offset details at the given forDateTime. This is the equivalent of calling offsetFromUtc(), abbreviation(), etc individually but is more efficient.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also offsetFromUtc(), standardTimeOffset(), daylightTimeOffset(), and abbreviation().
int QTimeZone::offsetFromUtc(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const
Returns the total effective offset at the given atDateTime, i.e. the number of seconds to add to UTC to obtain the local time. This includes any DST offset that may be in effect, i.e. it is the sum of standardTimeOffset() and daylightTimeOffset() for the given datetime.
For example, for the time zone "Europe/Berlin" the standard time offset is +3600 seconds and the DST offset is +3600 seconds. During standard time offsetFromUtc() will return +3600 (UTC+01:00), and during DST it will return +7200 (UTC+02:00).
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also standardTimeOffset() and daylightTimeOffset().
QTimeZone::OffsetData QTimeZone::previousTransition(const QDateTime &beforeDateTime) const
Returns the first time zone Transition before the given beforeDateTime. This is most useful when you have a Transition time and wish to find the Transition before it.
If there is no transition before the given beforeDateTime then an invalid OffsetData will be returned with an invalid QDateTime.
The given beforeDateTime is exclusive.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also hasTransitions(), nextTransition(), and transitions().
int QTimeZone::standardTimeOffset(const QDateTime &atDateTime) const
Returns the standard time offset at the given atDateTime, i.e. the number of seconds to add to UTC to obtain the local Standard Time. This excludes any DST offset that may be in effect.
For example, for the time zone "Europe/Berlin" the standard time offset is +3600 seconds. During both standard and DST offsetFromUtc() will return +3600 (UTC+01:00).
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also offsetFromUtc() and daylightTimeOffset().
void QTimeZone::swap(QTimeZone &other)
Swaps this time zone instance with other. This function is very fast and never fails.
[static]
QTimeZone QTimeZone::systemTimeZone()
Returns a QTimeZone object that describes local system time.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled. The returned instance is usually equivalent to the lightweight time representation QTimeZone(QTimeZone::LocalTime)
, albeit implemented as a time zone.
See also utc(), Initialization, and asBackendZone().
[static]
QByteArray QTimeZone::systemTimeZoneId()
Returns the current system time zone IANA ID.
On Windows this ID is translated from the Windows ID using an internal translation table and the user's selected country. As a consequence there is a small chance any Windows install may have IDs not known by Qt, in which case "UTC" will be returned.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also systemTimeZone().
[since 6.2]
QLocale::Territory QTimeZone::territory() const
Returns the territory for the time zone.
A return of AnyTerritory means the zone has no known territorial association. In some cases this may be because the zone has no associated territory - for example, UTC - or because the zone is used in several territories - for example, CET. In other cases, the QTimeZone backend may not know which territory the zone is associated with - for example, because it is not the primary zone of the territory in which it is used.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
This function was introduced in Qt 6.2.
[constexpr, since 6.5]
Qt::TimeSpec QTimeZone::timeSpec() const
Returns a Qt::TimeSpec identifying the type of time representation.
If the result is Qt::TimeZone, this time description is a time zone (backed by system-supplied or standard data); otherwise, it is a lightweight time representation. If the result is Qt::LocalTime it describes local time: see Qt::TimeSpec for details.
This function was introduced in Qt 6.5.
See also fixedSecondsAheadOfUtc() and asBackendZone().
CFTimeZoneRef QTimeZone::toCFTimeZone() const
Creates a CFTimeZone from a QTimeZone.
The caller owns the CFTimeZone object and is responsible for releasing it.
See also fromCFTimeZone().
NSTimeZone *QTimeZone::toNSTimeZone() const
Creates an NSTimeZone from a QTimeZone.
The NSTimeZone object is autoreleased.
See also fromNSTimeZone().
QTimeZone::OffsetDataList QTimeZone::transitions(const QDateTime &fromDateTime, const QDateTime &toDateTime) const
Returns a list of all time zone transitions between the given datetimes.
The given fromDateTime and toDateTime are inclusive.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also hasTransitions(), nextTransition(), and previousTransition().
[static]
QTimeZone QTimeZone::utc()
Returns a QTimeZone object that describes UTC as a time zone.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled. It is equivalent to passing 0 to QTimeZone(int offsetSeconds) and to the lightweight time representation QTimeZone(QTimeZone::UTC), albeit implemented as a time zone, unlike the latter.
See also systemTimeZone(), Initialization, and asBackendZone().
[static]
QByteArray QTimeZone::windowsIdToDefaultIanaId(const QByteArray &windowsId)
Returns the default IANA ID for a given windowsId.
Because a Windows ID can cover several IANA IDs in several different territories, this function returns the most frequently used IANA ID with no regard for the territory and should thus be used with care. It is usually best to request the default for a specific territory.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also ianaIdToWindowsId() and windowsIdToIanaIds().
[static]
QByteArray QTimeZone::windowsIdToDefaultIanaId(const QByteArray &windowsId, QLocale::Territory territory)
Returns the default IANA ID for a given windowsId and territory.
Because a Windows ID can cover several IANA IDs within a given territory, the most frequently used IANA ID in that territory is returned.
As a special case, AnyTerritory returns the default of those IANA IDs that have no known territorial association.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also ianaIdToWindowsId(), windowsIdToIanaIds(), and territory().
[static]
QList<QByteArray> QTimeZone::windowsIdToIanaIds(const QByteArray &windowsId)
Returns all the IANA IDs for a given windowsId.
The returned list is sorted alphabetically.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also ianaIdToWindowsId() and windowsIdToDefaultIanaId().
[static]
QList<QByteArray> QTimeZone::windowsIdToIanaIds(const QByteArray &windowsId, QLocale::Territory territory)
Returns all the IANA IDs for a given windowsId and territory.
As a special case, AnyTerritory selects those IANA IDs that have no known territorial association.
The returned list is in order of frequency of usage, i.e. larger zones within a territory are listed first.
This method is only available when feature timezone
is enabled.
See also ianaIdToWindowsId(), windowsIdToDefaultIanaId(), and territory().
bool QTimeZone::operator!=(const QTimeZone &other) const
Returns true
if this time zone is not equal to the other time zone.
Two representations are different if they are internally described differently, even if they agree in their representation of all moments of time. In particular, a lightweight time representation may coincide with a time zone but the two will not be equal.
QTimeZone &QTimeZone::operator=(const QTimeZone &other)
Assignment operator, assign other to this.
QTimeZone &QTimeZone::operator=(QTimeZone &&other)
Move-assigns other to this QTimeZone instance, transferring the ownership of its data to this instance.
bool QTimeZone::operator==(const QTimeZone &other) const
Returns true
if this time representation is equal to the other.
Two representations are different if they are internally described differently, even if they agree in their representation of all moments of time. In particular, a lightweight time representation may coincide with a time zone but the two will not be equal.
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