Is there a standard way for a Web Server to determine what time zone offset a user is in?
From a HTTP header, or part of the user-agent description perhaps?
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Is there a standard way for a Web Server to determine what time zone offset a user is in? From a |
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timezone.js:
timezone.php:
When you want to use it add Edit: P.S. This is untested. |
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The most popular (==standard?) way of determining the time zone I've seen around is simply asking the user herself. If your website requires subscription, this could be saved in the users' profile data. For anon users, the dates could be displayed as UTC or GMT or some such. I'm not trying to be a smart aleck. It's just that sometimes some problems have finer solutions outside of any programming context. |
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Javascript is the easiest way to get the client's local time. I would suggest using an As far as geolocation, I've used MaxMind GeoIP on several projects and it works well, though I'm not sure if they provide timezone data. It's a service you pay for and they provide monthly updates to your database. They provide wrappers in several web languages. |
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There are no HTTP headers that will report the clients timezone so far although it has been suggested to include it in the HTTP specification. If it was me, I would probably try to fetch the timezone using clientside JavaScript and then submit it to the server using Ajax or something. |
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Using Unkwntech's approach, I wrote a function using jQuery and PHP. This is tested, and does work! On the PHP page where you are want to have the timezone as a variable, have this snippet of code somewhere near the top of the page:
This will read the session variable "time", which we are now about to create. On the same page, in the , you need to first of all include jQuery:
Also in the , below the jQuery, paste this:
You may or may not have noticed, but you need to change the url to your actual domain. One last thing. You are probably wondering what the heck timezone.php is. Well, it is simply this: (create a new file called timezone.php and point to it with the above url)
If this works correctly, it will first load the page, execute the JavaScript, and reload the page. You will then be able to read the $timezone variable and use it to your pleasure! It returns the current UTC/GMT time zone offset (GMT -7) or whatever timezone you are in. |
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Well, lucky for you that answer can be found on our very own stackoverflow website: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1033/ip-to-country spoiler: http://www.hostip.info/use.html |
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Here is a more complete way. (1) Get the timezone offset for the user (2) Test some days on DLS boundaries to determine if they are in a zone that uses DLS. |
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Here is a robust JavaScript solution to determine the time zone the browser is in.
http://www.pageloom.com/automatic-timezone-detection-with-javascript |
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The magic all seems to be in
That's cool, I didn't know about that. Does it work in IE, etc? From there you should be able to use JS to ajax, set cookies, whatever. I'd probably go the cookie route myself. You'll need to allow the user to change it though. We tried to use geolocation (via maxmind) to do this a while ago, and it was wrong reasonably often - enough to make it not worth doing, so we just let the user set it in their profile, and show a notice to users who haven't set theirs yet. |
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I determine timezone with Geolocation and using the Geonames APIs. |
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javascript:
simply provide your times in UNIX Timestamp format to this function, javascript already knows the timezone of the user. like this: php:
this will always show the times correctly based on the timezone the person has set on his computer clock, no need to ask anything to anyone and save it into places thank god! |
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With PHP date function you will get the date time of server on which site is located. The only way to get user time is to use JavaScript. But I suggest you to, if your site have registration required then best way is to ask user while registration as compulsory field. You can list various time zones in register page and save that in database. After this if user login to site then you can set default time zone for that session as per users’ selected time zone. You can set any specific time zone using PHP function Basically users’ time zone is goes to client side, so we must use JavaScript for this. Below is the script to get users’ time zone using PHP and JavaScript.
But as per my point of view, it’s better to ask to the users if registration is mandatory in your project. |
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If you happen to be using OpenID for authentication, Simple Registration Extension would solve the problem for authenticated users (You'll need to convert from tz to numeric). Another option would be to infer the time zone from the user agent's country preference. This is a somewhat crude method (won't work for en-US), but makes a good approximation. |
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Here is an article (with source code) that explains how to determine and use localized time in an ASP.NET (VB.NET, C#) application: In short, the described approach relies on the JavaScript getTimezoneOffset function, which returns the value that is saved in the session cookie and used by code-behind to adjust time values between GMT and local time. The nice thing is that the user does not need to specify the time zone (the code does it automatically). There is more involved (this is why I link to the article), but provided code makes it really easy to use. I suspect that you can convert the logic to PHP and other languages (as long as you understand ASP.NET). |
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Easy, just use the JavaScript
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I still have not seen a detailed answer here that gets the time zone. You shouldn't need to geocode by IP address or use PHP (lol) or incorrectly guess from an offset. Firstly a time zone is not just an offset from GMT. It is an area of land in which the time rules are set by local standards. Some countries have daylight savings, and will switch on DST at differing times. It's usually important to get the actual zone, not just the current offset. If you intend to store this timezone, for instance in user preferences you want the zone and not just the offset. For realtime conversions it won't matter much. Now, to get the time zone with javascript you can use this:
However I found it easier to simply use this robust plugin which returns the Olsen formatted timezone: |
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To submit it as an HTTP header on AJAX requests with jQuery
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Try this php code
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Here's how I do it. This will set the PHP default timezone to the user's local timezone. Just paste the following on the top of all your pages:
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A simple way to do it is by using:
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Don't use IP address to definitively determine location (and hense timezone)-- that's because with NAT, Proxies (increasingly popular), and VPNs, IP addresses do not necessarily realistically reflect the user's actual location, but the location at which the servers implementing those protocols reside. Similar to how Area Codes are no longer useful for locating a telephone user, given the popularity of Number Portability. IP and other techniques shown above are useful for suggesting a default that the user can adjust/correct. |
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