Ruby on Rails Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Hello,  I am relatively new to RoR, but vastly experienced with time zones and date/time issues on other multiple other platforms.

I answer quite a few questions on StackOverflow in this area, and often questions about ActiveSupport::TimeZone come up.  I'm hoping that someone from this forum can provide the background behind this implementation, such that I am better informed to address these questions.

My understanding is that the Ruby TZInfo gem is the base implementation of the IANA/Olson time zone database, but Rails ships with ActiveSupport::TimeZone which is based on this, with some changes.  It's the changes that I'm unsure about.


> The TimeZone class serves as a wrapper around TZInfo::Timezone instances.

This is the basis for my earlier statements.  But, WHY was it created?  Why not just use the TZInfo gem?

 It allows us to do the following:
>    Limit the set of zones provided by TZInfo to a meaningful subset of 146 zones.

Ok - but who determined which of the 578 zones are "meaningful"?  By what criteria?  And by what review process do newly established zones get determined if they make the cut or not? Is there a recommended strategy for dealing with zones that were omitted?
Also, why limit it to begin with?  The size of the database shouldn't be an issue - since this is all server-side code.  I could see perhaps providing a method to retrieve those that are "meaningful" from the larger data set, but it doesn't make sense to me that they are omitted.


Retrieve and display zones with a friendlier name (e.g., "Eastern Time (US & Canada)" instead of "America/New_York").

Again, who decides what "friendlier" means?  I sure hope the original names are not lost - since those are keys used for interoperability with other systems that also implement the TZDB.  Are they still available on the TimeZone object?  What about non-English speakers, are these names localized for them?  Some of the names are quite reminiscent of the Display Names of the proprietary Microsoft Windows time zones. Did that have an influence on their creation?

I see that the MAPPING constant is available in the documentation.  That is good.  I haven't fully digested it though - is it a one-to-one mapping?  Does it handle TZDB link alias, such as Asia/Calcutta => Asia/Kolkata or US/Eastern => America/New_York ?

Thank you in advance for any and all information that you can provide.

-Matt Johnson

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