The time zone information is contained as binary data in the registry under HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindows NTCurrentVersionTime Zones(zone name)TZI
. The structure of the data is given in the TIME_ZONE_INFORMATION documentation:
struct STimeZoneFromRegistry
{
long Bias;
long StandardBias;
long DaylightBias;
SYSTEMTIME StandardDate;
SYSTEMTIME DaylightDate;
};
And here's example code to read the key:
TIME_ZONE_INFORMATION tz = {0};
STimeZoneFromRegistry binary_data;
DWORD size = sizeof(binary_data);
HKEY hk = NULL;
TCHAR zone_key[] = _T("SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Time Zones\Central Standard Time");
if ((RegOpenKeyEx(HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, zone_key, 0, KEY_QUERY_VALUE, &hk) == ERROR_SUCCESS) &&
(RegQueryValueEx(hk, "TZI", NULL, NULL, (BYTE *) &binary_data, &size) == ERROR_SUCCESS))
{
tz.Bias = binary_data.Bias;
tz.DaylightBias = binary_data.DaylightBias;
tz.DaylightDate = binary_data.DaylightDate;
tz.StandardBias = binary_data.StandardBias;
tz.StandardDate = binary_data.StandardDate;
}
Edit: Sorry, this answer is redundant - I'm sure you could have figured all this out using the documentation you linked to in the question. I've only had to do this once, and this is the only method I could find.
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