Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <pointede...@web.de> writes: > [X-Post & F'up2 comp.unix.shell] > > Chris Angelico wrote: > >> On Fri, Jul 31, 2015 at 6:15 PM, Cameron Simpson <c...@zip.com.au> wrote: >>> Actually, bash has no timezone support but the date command _does_, and >>> probably neither better nor worse than Python. All one has to do is set >>> the TZ environment variable, eg (untested): >>> >>> _year_gmt=$( TZ=GMT date +%Y ) >> >> That's assuming that it's converting against the current system >> timezone. I don't know how you'd use `date` to convert between two >> arbitrary timezones. […] > > With POSIX date(1), ISTM all you could do is set the system time and for an > additional invocation the TZ variable accordingly for output. > > <http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/date.html> > > With GNU date(1): > > $ (tz_source="Asia/Dubai"; time_source="$(LC_TIME=C TZ=$tz_source date -d > "today 00:00 UTC+4" -Im)"; tz_target="America/Chicago"; echo "When it was > $time_source in $tz_source, it was $(LC_TIME=C TZ=$tz_target date -d > "$time_source") in $tz_target.") > When it was 2015-07-31T00:00+0400 in Asia/Dubai, it was Thu Jul 30 15:00:00 > CDT 2015 in America/Chicago. > > $ date --version > date (GNU coreutils) 8.23 > […] >
Here's a corresponding Python code. I haven't seen the beginning of the discussion. I apologize if it has been already posted: #!/usr/bin/env python from datetime import datetime import pytz # $ pip install pytz source_tz, target_tz = map(pytz.timezone, ['Asia/Dubai', 'America/Chicago']) d = datetime.now(source_tz) # the current time in source_tz timezone midnight = source_tz.localize(datetime(d.year, d.month, d.day), is_dst=None) fmt = "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z" print("When it was {:{fmt}} in {}, it was {:{fmt}} in {}".format( midnight, source_tz.zone, target_tz.normalize(midnight), target_tz.zone, fmt=fmt)) Output: When it was 2015-08-01T00:00:00+0400 in Asia/Dubai, it was 2015-07-31T15:00:00-0500 in America/Chicago -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list