I have different timezones and their GMT and DST. Example:
TimeZoneId | GMT offset | DST offset
private static ReadOnlyCollection<TimeZoneInfo> _timeZones = TimeZoneInfo.GetSystemTimeZones();
public static DateTime ToUsersTime(this DateTime utcDate, int timeZoneId)
{
return TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTimeFromUtc(utcDate, timeZones[timeZoneId]);
}
An example of converting a UTC date to a user's date using the TimeZoneInfo class (.NET 3.5+).
TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTimeFromUtc(mytime, TimeZoneInfo.FindSystemTimeZoneById("Eastern Standard Time"));
The time zone IDs you've given are the ones from the IANA time zone database, aka TZDB (aka Olson, aka tz). They're not supported by .NET (although .NET Core running on Linux/Mac will probably do what you want).
My Noda Time project does support them though. You'd use:
var zoneId = "America/Antigua";
var zone = DateTimeZoneProviders.Tzdb[zoneId];
var now = SystemClock.Instance.GetCurrentInstant();
var zoned = now.InZone(zone);
Console.WriteLine(zoned);
That uses the SystemClock
explicitly - in real code I'd advise you to accept an IClock
via dependency injection for testability - inject SystemClock.Instance
when running the application, but use FakeClock
for testing.
Alternative equivalent code demonstrating ZonedClock
:
var zoneId = "America/Antigua";
var zone = DateTimeZoneProviders.Tzdb[zoneId];
var systemClock = SystemClock.Instance;
var zonedClock = systemClock.InZone(zone);
var zoned = zonedClock.GetCurrentZonedDateTime();
Console.WriteLine(zoned);