browser-tz
Timezone specific manipulation of datetime strings
Designed to be used on top of another library. Initial
implementation is build on top of moment-timezone
Motivation
This is a set of minimal operation needed to deal with timezone
in javascript. It focuses on only having one canonical
representation of a time, namely an ISO8601 string.
Docs
Example
var Timezone = require("browser-tz")
var timezoneData = require("moment-timezone/moment-timezones.json")
var tz = Timezone(timezoneData)
var today = new Date().toISOString()
var todayInNewYork = tz.IsoString(today, "America/New_York")
var tomorrowInNewYork = tz.addDay({
iso: todayInNewYork,
timezone: "America/New_York"
}, 1)
var timeString = tz.format(tomorrowInNewYork, "hh:mm A")
The timezone strategy
To make dealing with times and timezones easier this module
exposes the minimal number of data types and the minimal
number of operations on times, dates and timezones.
Generally in your server you should be storing times as ISO8601
strings, preferably in GMT.
Clientside rendering
For rendering these times you want to render that GMT ISO8601
time in a specific timezone. This means you should probably
pass tuples of { iso: String, timezone: String } to your
templates or views and they should use the IsoString
function
to format that tuple correctly. Once formatted as a correct
ISO8601 string with the correct offset for that datetime and
timezone you should be able to pass it into any formatting or
time related view component.
If you pass the IsoString
function an ISO string without an
offset. i.e. no Z
and no -04:00
it will assume that it's
a time in the timezone you give it and just add the correct
timezone offset for that datetime and timezone.
If you don't pass a timezone that it's already a correct ISO8601
string so it will just be returned
Computing future events from a users point of view
If a user wants to do a recurring event at a time in his timezone
or a user wants to do an event next Monday at 9am in his
timezone then you need the ability to add some time offset
to a time or compute a certain time in his timezone in the
future.
The doing an event next Monday at 9am is just another usage of
the IsoString
function where you ask it to give you the local
ISO8601 representation of that Monday 9am in the users timezone
If you wanted to compute a recurring weekly schedule you can use
the addWeek
function to take a time and a timezone and
compute the ISO8601 string for that that a time a week later in
the users timezone. Using this function reprects DST change.
So if a DST change happens and the week is actually 7 days + 1
hour in GMT it will add 7 days and 1 hour to the time (i.e.
return next weeks time with the offset changed).
Dealing with ambigious local times
A user might ask you for 1am
on a day of DST where the hour
goes back and you actually have 1am
twice because 2am
goes
back to 1am
. If a user asks for this local time then the
IsoString
function will return the first 1am
.
A user might ask you for 2am
on a day of DST where the hour
goes forward and 2am
becomes 3am
. This means 2am
local
time does not actually exist. In this case 3am
is returned
and 2.30am
also turns into 3.30am
.
Installation
npm install browser-tz
Contributors
MIT Licenced