Hi Eric,

Yes, this works fine so far as I can see... I attempted to reply yesterday 
but, it seems, something went astray and my message wasn't posted. I'll 
update and try out the reversion to getevents_linked() that you discuss in 
your next message.

Thanks again for everything,

Anthony

On Wednesday, 21 October 2020 at 10:07:42 UTC+1 Eric Shulman wrote:

> On Wednesday, October 21, 2020 at 1:19:36 AM UTC-7, Anthony wrote:
>>
>> I'm in the UK and, it seems for me, that the 'break point' for the date 
>> is 2 December 1847. Back to then everything seems to be fine but go to 1 
>> December 1847 and the date displayed is a day earlier, so 30 November 1847 
>> in this case. I don't see a problem at 18 November 1883 when standardized 
>> time zones introduced in the USA. I'm not sure what this means!
>>
>
> Does the "timezone hack" (appending "12" to the end of the date... i.e., 
> "1847120112") bypass the problem?
>
> -e
>
>
>

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