SkillAgentSearch skills...

Timezone

Timezone project providing a simple way to turn location and unix timestamp into timezone and local time.

Install / Use

/learn @graphhopper/Timezone
About this skill

Quality Score

0/100

Supported Platforms

Universal

README

timezone

Build Status

Requires Java 1.8.

Timezone Core

The timezone project can be imported into your project and run by directly interfacing with the public methods, without needing to start the web service. Add the project as a dependency and create a new TimeZones object, which can be interacted with through .getTimeZone() and .getOffsetDateTime() including all local time and timezone information such as current time in the timezone and offset from GMT.

Example:

TimeZones timeZones = new TimeZones();
timeZones.initWithWorldData(new File("./world-data/tz_world.shp").toURI().toURL());

TimeZone tz = timeZones.getTimeZone(40.713956,-75.767577);
long unixTimeStamp = 1488363179;
OffsetDateTime offsetDateTime = timeZones.getOffsetDateTime(unixTimeStamp,tz);
System.out.println(offsetDateTime);

//or even shorter
OffsetDateTime offsetDateTime2 = timeZones.getOffsetDateTime(unixTimeStamp,40.713956,-75.767577);
System.out.println(offsetDateTime2);

Timezone Webapp

Our timezone app turns your location and timestamp into timezone and local time. Thus, if you need local time in your application, just ask GraphHopper timezone. It is microservice you can run wherever you like.

Example

Example 1

request: http://localhost:8080/timezone?timestamp=1488363179&location=40.713956,-75.767577

response:

{

    "timezone": "America/New_York",
    "timezone_name": "Eastern Standard Time",
    "local_time": {
        "offset": -18000,
        "year": 2017,
        "month": "March",
        "day_of_month": 2,
        "day_of_week": "Thursday",
        "month_value": 3,
        "hour": 16,
        "minute": 19,
        "second": 52,
        "nano": 0
    }

}

Example 2

request: http://localhost:8080/timezone?timestamp=1488489592&location=48.873748,2.344482&language=fr

response:

{
    "timezone": "Europe/Paris",
    "timezone_name": "Heure d'Europe centrale",
    "local_time": {
        "offset": 3600,
        "year": 2017,
        "month": "mars",
        "day_of_month": 2,
        "day_of_week": "jeudi",
        "month_value": 3,
        "hour": 22,
        "minute": 19,
        "second": 52,
        "nano": 0
    }
}

Example 3

request: http://localhost:8080/timezone?timestamp=1488489592&location=36.031332,138.796876&language=ja

response:

{
    "timezone": "Asia/Tokyo",
    "timezone_name": "日本標準時",
    "local_time": {
        "offset": 32400,
        "year": 2017,
        "month": "3月",
        "day_of_month": 3,
        "day_of_week": "金曜日",
        "month_value": 3,
        "hour": 6,
        "minute": 19,
        "second": 52,
        "nano": 0
    }
}

try your own example:

  • get current unix timestamp from here: http://www.unixtimestamp.com/
  • and coordinates from here: https://graphhopper.com/maps/ (just right click wherever you like to specify start and you will be provided with the coordinates in the start field. just copy and paste it as it is)

Input & Output

You need to specify two parameters, (Unix) timestamp and location (lat,lon), and you will be provided with the according timezone, local time and offset to UTC. Local time and offset consider daylight saving time (dst).

Input:

Parameter | Description :------|:----- timestamp | Unix timestamp (in seconds) location | latitude, longitude language | optional, default is 'en' - see the supported languages here

Output:

Name | Description :------|:----- timezone | time zone id as defined here: http://efele.net/maps/tz/world/ timezone_name | full name of time zone local_time | local time information considering daylight saving time

local_time:

Name | Description :------|:----- offset | offset to UTC in seconds year | - month | - day_of_month | - day_of_week | - month_value | - hour | - minute | - second | - nano | -

TZ data

Make sure that you have updated your java environment with the latest tz data, otherwise old DST data might yield wrong local times. For example, such events "Russia Returns to Standard Time All Year" cause wrong local time calculations if you have not updated your JRE/JDK. You can update it as described here:

http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/tzupdater-readme-136440.html

View on GitHub
GitHub Stars24
CategoryDevelopment
Updated1y ago
Forks7

Languages

Java

Security Score

75/100

Audited on Aug 12, 2024

No findings