On 2013 Jun 1 I expect the "PST8PDT" timezone to behave like GMT+7, as it is daylight savings in that timezone. However, it behaves like GMT+8:
>>> import pytz, datetime
>>> Pacific = pytz.timezone("PST8PDT")
>>> datetime.datetime(2013, 6, 1, 12, tzinfo=Pacific).astimezone(pytz.utc)
datetime.datetime(2013, 6, 1, 20, 0, tzinfo=<UTC>)
In contrast, on 2013 Jan 1 it behaves (correctly) like GMT+8:
>>> datetime.datetime(2013, 1, 1, 12, tzinfo=Pacific).astimezone(pytz.utc)
datetime.datetime(2013, 1, 1, 20, 0, tzinfo=<UTC>)
What am I doing wrong? Thanks in advance!
You can't assign the timezone in the datetime
constructor, because it doesn't give the timezone object a chance to adjust for daylight savings - the date isn't accessible to it. This causes even more problems for certain parts of the world, where the name and offset of the timezone have changed over the years.
From the pytz
documentation:
Unfortunately using the tzinfo argument of the standard datetime constructors ‘’does not work’’ with pytz for many timezones.
Use the localize
method with a naive datetime instead.
>>> Pacific.localize(datetime.datetime(2013, 6, 1, 12)).astimezone(pytz.utc)
datetime.datetime(2013, 6, 1, 19, 0, tzinfo=<UTC>)
>>> Pacific.localize(datetime.datetime(2013, 1, 1, 12)).astimezone(pytz.utc)
datetime.datetime(2013, 1, 1, 20, 0, tzinfo=<UTC>)