On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 7:12 AM, luofeiyu <elearn2...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I found that it is a concept LMT local mean time can express my meaning. > > import pytz,datetime > tz1 = pytz.timezone('Asia/Shanghai') > tz1 > <DstTzInfo 'Asia/Shanghai' LMT+8:06:00 STD> > >>> str(tz1) > 'Asia/Shanghai' > > tz2 = pytz.timezone('Asia/Urumqi') > tz2 > <DstTzInfo 'Asia/Urumqi' LMT+5:50:00 STD> > > the time difference between shanghai and Urumqi is about 2 hours in the form > of LMT. > > now ,how can i get the output of `LMT+8:06:00` in <DstTzInfo 'Asia/Shanghai' > LMT+8:06:00 STD> > > str(tz1) or str(tz2) can not do that.
By working with dates far enough in the past that the modern time zone rules don't apply. Some experimentation determines that the timedelta between Shanghai and Urumqi goes from 136 minutes to 120 minutes in 1928, and then from 120 minutes to 0 minutes in 1980. I don't know why those dates don't match the dates given by Wikipedia in [1], and I also don't know why pytz shows the LMT offset in the repr for those timezones instead of the current UTC offset. [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_in_China -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list