On Sep 15, 2008, at 05:35 , Jean-Daniel Dupas wrote:
Le 15 sept. 08 à 09:56, Jason Coco a écrit :
On Sep 15, 2008, at 03:49 , Markus Spoettl wrote:
Hi List,
I just know it must be there but I can't see it. How can I get to
the NSTimeZone for a given NSDate. When using -description: the
Le 15 sept. 08 à 09:56, Jason Coco a écrit :
On Sep 15, 2008, at 03:49 , Markus Spoettl wrote:
Hi List,
I just know it must be there but I can't see it. How can I get to
the NSTimeZone for a given NSDate. When using -description: the
date got a time zone, so it's stored in there but how
On Sep 15, 2008, at 12:56 AM, Jason Coco wrote:
All NSDate objects are stored as seconds since the reference date
(Jan 1 1970 00:00 GMT) and so are always GMT. The description is
using the default time zone to adjust the date. You can get the
default time zone with [NSTimeZone defaultTimeZon
On Sep 15, 2008, at 03:49 , Markus Spoettl wrote:
Hi List,
I just know it must be there but I can't see it. How can I get to
the NSTimeZone for a given NSDate. When using -description: the date
got a time zone, so it's stored in there but how on earth can I get
to it? I only need the GM
Hi List,
I just know it must be there but I can't see it. How can I get to
the NSTimeZone for a given NSDate. When using -description: the date
got a time zone, so it's stored in there but how on earth can I get to
it? I only need the GMT offset (numerically, not as string), in case
the