We are developing a C# application for a web-service client. This will run on Windows XP PC's.
One of the fields returned by the web service is a DateTime field. The server returns a field in GMT format i.e. with a "Z" at the end.
However, we found that .NET seems to do some kind of implicit conversion and the time was always 12 hours out.
The following code sample resolves this to some extent in that the 12 hour difference has gone but it makes no allowance for NZ daylight saving.
CultureInfo ci = new CultureInfo("en-NZ");
string date = "Web service date".ToString("R", ci);
DateTime convertedDate = DateTime.Parse(date);
As per this date site:
UTC/GMT Offset
Standard time zone: UTC/GMT +12 hours
Daylight saving time: +1 hour
Current time zone offset: UTC/GMT +13 hours
How do we adjust for the extra hour? Can this be done programmatically or is this some kind of setting on the PC's?
For strings such as 2012-09-19 01:27:30.000
, DateTime.Parse
cannot tell what time zone the date and time are from.
DateTime
has a Kind property, which can have one of three time zone options:
NOTE If you are wishing to represent a date/time other than UTC or your local time zone, then you should use DateTimeOffset
.
So for the code in your question:
DateTime convertedDate = DateTime.Parse(dateStr);
var kind = convertedDate.Kind; // will equal DateTimeKind.Unspecified
You say you know what kind it is, so tell it.
DateTime convertedDate = DateTime.SpecifyKind(
DateTime.Parse(dateStr),
DateTimeKind.Utc);
var kind = convertedDate.Kind; // will equal DateTimeKind.Utc
Now, once the system knows its in UTC time, you can just call ToLocalTime
:
DateTime dt = convertedDate.ToLocalTime();
This will give you the result you require.