Is it possible, and if yes, how, to get the time zone (i.e. the UTC offset or a datetime.timezone
instance with that offset) that is used by datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp()
to convert a POSIX timestamp (seconds since the epoch) to a datetime
object?
datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp()
converts a POSIX timestamp to a naive datetime
object (i.e. without a tzinfo
), but does so using the system's locale to adjust it to the local timezone and the UTC offset that was in effect at that time.
For example, using the date 2008-12-27 midnight UTC (40 * 356 * 86400 seconds since the epoch):
>>> datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(40 * 356 * 86400)
datetime.datetime(2008, 12, 27, 1, 0)
That timestamp is converted to a datetime
object at 1 o'clock in the morning (which it was at that time, here in an CET/CEST timezone). 100 days later, this is the result:
>>> datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp((40 * 356 + 100) * 86400)
datetime.datetime(2009, 4, 6, 2, 0)
Which is 2 o'clock in the morning. This is because by then, DST was active.
I'd expected that datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp()
would set the tzinfo
it uses in the returned datetime
instance, but it doesn't.
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