Skip to content
Advertisement

Why is subtracting these two times (in 1927) giving a strange result?

If I run the following program, which parses two date strings referencing times 1 second apart and compares them:

JavaScript

The output is:

JavaScript

Why is ld4-ld3, not 1 (as I would expect from the one-second difference in the times), but 353?

If I change the dates to times 1 second later:

JavaScript

Then ld4-ld3 will be 1.


Java version:

JavaScript
JavaScript

Advertisement

Answer

It’s a time zone change on December 31st in Shanghai.

See this page for details of 1927 in Shanghai. Basically at midnight at the end of 1927, the clocks went back 5 minutes and 52 seconds. So “1927-12-31 23:54:08” actually happened twice, and it looks like Java is parsing it as the later possible instant for that local date/time – hence the difference.

Just another episode in the often weird and wonderful world of time zones.

EDIT: Stop press! History changes…

The original question would no longer demonstrate quite the same behaviour, if rebuilt with version 2013a of TZDB. In 2013a, the result would be 358 seconds, with a transition time of 23:54:03 instead of 23:54:08.

I only noticed this because I’m collecting questions like this in Noda Time, in the form of unit tests… The test has now been changed, but it just goes to show – not even historical data is safe.

EDIT: History has changed again…

In TZDB 2014f, the time of the change has moved to 1900-12-31, and it’s now a mere 343 second change (so the time between t and t+1 is 344 seconds, if you see what I mean).

EDIT: To answer a question around a transition at 1900… it looks like the Java timezone implementation treats all time zones as simply being in their standard time for any instant before the start of 1900 UTC:

JavaScript

The code above produces no output on my Windows machine. So any time zone which has any offset other than its standard one at the start of 1900 will count that as a transition. TZDB itself has some data going back earlier than that, and doesn’t rely on any idea of a “fixed” standard time (which is what getRawOffset assumes to be a valid concept) so other libraries needn’t introduce this artificial transition.

User contributions licensed under: CC BY-SA
10 People found this is helpful
Advertisement