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time_zone class

A time_zone represents the time zone for a specific geographic area. It has the full history of time zone rules for each area so time conversions will be accurate if you convert a time for a date back when the rules are different for the time zone than they are today.

Syntax

class time_zone;  // Since C++20

Remarks

The <chrono> library creates time_zone objects as part of its time zone database initialization. It provides const access to the created objects.

You can't construct or copy a time_zone object, and using the default move constructor or default move assignment operator results in undefined behavior.

This is how you get a time_zone instance:

const auto& timeZoneDatabase = get_tzdb(); // initialize the time zone database
const auto& currentZone = timeZoneDatabase.current_zone();

Microsoft C++ supports the time_zone class starting in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.10. The time_zone class is a C++20 feature. The /std:c++latest compiler option is required.

Members

Public member functions and function templates

Name Description
get_info Gets a sys_info or local_info for this time_zone.
name Gets the name of this time_zone.
to_local Converts a sys_time to a local_time in this time_zone.
to_sys Converts a local_time to a sys_time in this time_zone.

Requirements

Header: <chrono>

Time-zone data is only available for Windows 10 version 1903/19H1 and later, and Windows Server 2022 and later.

Namespace: std::chrono

get_info

The function template get_info has two overloads that get a sys_info or local_info for this time_zone.

template<class Duration>
sys_info get_info(const sys_time<Duration>& st) const;  // Since C++20
    
template<class Duration>
local_info get_info(const local_time<Duration>& lt) const;  // Since C++20

Parameters

Duration
The duration class for the sys_time or local_time parameter.

st
The sys_time time point used to get a sys_info result.

lt
The local_time time point used to get a local_info result.

Return value

In the get_info function template that takes a sys_time time point st, it returns a sys_info object i such that st is in the range [i.begin, i.end).

In the get_info function template that takes a local_time time point lt, it returns a local_info object.

Remarks

Microsoft C++ supports time_zone::get_info starting in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.10. The function is a C++20 feature that requires the /std:c++latest compiler option.

name

Gets the name of this time_zone.

string_view name() const noexcept;  // Since C++20

Return value

Returns the name of the time zone as a string_view.

Remarks

Microsoft C++ supports time_zone::name starting in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.10.

to_local

The function template to_local converts a sys_time to a local_time in this time_zone.

template<class Duration>
local_time<common_type_t<Duration, seconds>>
to_local(const sys_time<Duration>& st) const;  // Since C++20

Parameters

Duration
The duration class for the sys_time or local_time parameter.

st
The sys_time time point used to get a sys_info result.

Return value

to_local returns the local_time associated with st in this time_zone.

Remarks

Microsoft C++ supports time_zone::to_local starting in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.10. The function is a C++20 feature that requires the /std:c++latest compiler option.

Example: convert sys_time to local_time

// compile using: /std:c++latest
#include <iostream>
#include <chrono>

using namespace std::chrono;

int main()
{
    const auto& timeZoneDatabase = get_tzdb();
    const auto& currentZone = timeZoneDatabase.current_zone();
    local_time<system_clock::duration> lt = currentZone->to_local(system_clock::now());

    std::cout << "local_time: " << lt << "\n";
   
    return 0;
}
local_time: 2021-09-08 15:15:53.1830646

to_sys

The function template to_sys has two overloads that convert a local_time to a sys_time in this time_zone.

template<class Duration>
sys_time<common_type_t<Duration, seconds>>
to_sys(const local_time<Duration>& lt) const;  // Since C++20

template<class Duration>
sys_time<common_type_t<Duration, seconds>>
to_sys(const local_time<Duration>& lt, choose z) const;  // Since C++20

Parameters

Duration
The duration class for the local_time parameter.

lt
The local_time time point to convert.

z
A value of choose::earliest or choose::latest. It's used to resolve otherwise ambiguous results.

Return value

to_sys returns a sys_time that's at least as fine as seconds. It's finer if the argument lt has finer precision. The returned sys_time is the UTC equivalent of lt according to the rules of this time_zone.

The one-parameter overload throws an ambiguous_local_time exception if the conversion from lt to a sys_time is ambiguous, and a nonexistent_local_time exception if the local time point represents a non-existent local time point. Ambiguity can happen during a daylight saving time to standard time transition. Two instances of the same local time point may occur in one day. A non-existent local time point represents a time point in the transition from standard time to daylight saving time.

The two-parameter overload doesn't throw an exception in these cases. If the conversion from lt to a sys_time is ambiguous, to_sys returns the earlier sys_time if z is choose::earliest, and returns the later sys_time if z is choose::latest. If the lt represents a non-existent time between two UTC time points, then the two UTC time points are the same, so to_sys returns that UTC time point.

Remarks

Microsoft C++ supports time_zone::to_sys starting in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.10. The function is a C++20 feature that requires the /std:c++latest compiler option.

Example: convert local_time to sys_time

// compile using: /std:c++latest
#include <iostream>
#include <chrono>

using namespace std::chrono;

int main()
{
    const auto& timeZoneDatabase = get_tzdb();
    const auto& currentZone = timeZoneDatabase.current_zone();

    auto st = currentZone->to_sys(local_days{2021y/September/15d}+16h+45min, choose::earliest);

    std::cout << "sys_time: " << st << "\n";
   
    return 0;
}
sys_time: 2021-09-15 23:45:00.0000000

See also

<chrono>
Header files reference