Hi Skip, On 03/14/2016 09:32 AM, Skip Montanaro wrote: > On Mon, Mar 14, 2016 at 10:26 AM, Ian Kelly <ian.g.ke...@gmail.com> wrote: >> Why should it? You only asked pytz for the Chicago timezone. You >> didn't ask for it relative to any specific time. > > Thanks. I thought using America/Chicago was supposed to automagically > take into account transitions into and out of Daylight Savings. Is > there some way to get that?
Yes, pytz can handle DST correctly automatically when you give it 'America/Chicago', but until you apply that timezone to a particular datetime, there is no DST to handle. There is no implicit assumption of "today" when you do `pytz.timezone('America/Chicago'). If you apply the timezone to a particular datetime, you'll see that it does reflect DST correctly: >>> import datetime, pytz >>> tz = pytz.timezone('America/Chicago') >>> tz <DstTzInfo 'America/Chicago' LMT-1 day, 18:09:00 STD> >>> import datetime >>> dt = datetime.datetime.now() >>> dtl = tz.localize(dt) >>> dtl datetime.datetime(2016, 3, 14, 10, 11, 13, 514375, tzinfo=<DstTzInfo 'America/Chicago' CDT-1 day, 19:00:00 DST>) Carl
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