It doesn't seem to be officially supported. However, you can poke at the internals of a DstTzInfo
object and get it from there:
>>> from pytz import timezone
>>> tz = timezone('Europe/London')
>>> tz._utc_transition_times
[datetime.datetime(1, 1, 1, 0, 0), datetime.datetime(1916, 5, 21, 2, 0),
...
datetime.datetime(2036, 3, 30, 1, 0), datetime.datetime(2036, 10, 26, 1, 0),
datetime.datetime(2037, 3, 29, 1, 0), datetime.datetime(2037, 10, 25, 1, 0)]
Each entry corresponds to an entry in _transition_info
:
>>> tz._transition_info
[(datetime.timedelta(0), datetime.timedelta(0), 'GMT'),
(datetime.timedelta(0, 3600), datetime.timedelta(0, 3600), 'BST'),
...
(datetime.timedelta(0, 3600), datetime.timedelta(0, 3600), 'BST'),
(datetime.timedelta(0), datetime.timedelta(0), 'GMT'),
(datetime.timedelta(0, 3600), datetime.timedelta(0, 3600), 'BST'),
(datetime.timedelta(0), datetime.timedelta(0), 'GMT')]
And the source tells us what these mean:
_utc_transition_times = None # Sorted list of DST transition times in UTC
_transition_info = None # [(utcoffset, dstoffset, tzname)] corresponding
# to _utc_transition_times entries
Of course, this is implementation-dependent and you'd probably want to depend on particular versions of pytz that are known to work.