Convert NSDate to NSString with NSDateFormatter with TimeZone without GMT Time Modifier

Heath Borders picture Heath Borders · Sep 14, 2010 · Viewed 37.3k times · Source

I'm initializing my NSDateFormatter thusly:

NSDateFormatter *dateFormatter = [[[NSDateFormatter alloc] init] autorelease];
[dateFormatter setLocale:[[[NSLocale alloc] initWithLocaleIdentifier:@"en_US_POSIX"] autorelease]];
[dateFormatter setDateFormat:@"EEE, d MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss z"];
[dateFormatter setTimeZone:[NSTimeZone timeZoneForSecondsFromGMT:0]];
NSDate *date = [NSDate date];
NSString *dateString = [dateFormatter stringFromDate:date];

dateString is now:

Thu, 29 Jul 2010 14:58:42 GMT+00:00

I want to get rid of the "+00:00"

I'm guessing from http://unicode.org/reports/tr35/tr35-6.html#Time_Zone_Fallback that I might have a localization issue. I'm working around this right now by removing the "+00:00" manually, but that isn't ideal.

EDIT

I tried a couple of new ways to create the NSTimeZone, but they both produce the same dateString:

[NSTimeZone timeZoneWithName:@"GMT"];
[NSTimeZone timeZoneWithName:@"UTC"];
[NSTimeZone timeZoneWithAbbreviation:@"GMT"];
[NSTimeZone timeZoneWithAbbreviation:@"UTC"];

Answer

jlehr picture jlehr · Sep 14, 2010

Remove the trailing 'z' character from the format string if you don't want to display the time zone.

EDIT

On the other hand, if you just want to display the timezone name, just make the 'z' uppercase. ((edit: leave the 'z' lowercase for named timezone, i.e. PST and uppercase 'Z' for -0800))

EDIT

Lowercase 'z' works fine for all the other timezones, but unfortunately GMT is a special case. So the easiest thing to do is to just omit the 'z' and append " GMT" to the formatted date.