On Oct 7, 2009, at 1:13 PM, Ramsey Gurley wrote:

Hi all,

Executing the following code with a default time zone of US Eastern time

NSTimestamp ts1 = new NSTimestamp(2009,11,1,0,0,0,NSTimeZone.defaultTimeZone());

Try
NSTimestamp ts1 = new NSTimestamp(2009,11,1,12,0,0,NSTimeZone.defaultTimeZone());


NSTimestamp ts2 = ts1.timestampByAddingGregorianUnits( 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0 ); NSTimestamp ts3 = new NSTimestamp(2009,11,2,0,0,0,NSTimeZone.defaultTimeZone());
System.out.println(NSTimeZone.defaultTimeZone().getID());
System.out.println(ts1 + "\n" + ts2 + "\n" + ts3);

produces the following result :-/

America/New_York
2009-11-01 04:00:00 Etc/GMT
2009-11-02 04:00:00 Etc/GMT
2009-11-02 05:00:00 Etc/GMT

Is this a known bug?


I suspect so. When does DST go off this year? Adding 1 day adds exactly 24 hours, NOT one calendar day like we think about it.


Chuck

--
Chuck Hill             Senior Consultant / VP Development

Practical WebObjects - for developers who want to increase their overall knowledge of WebObjects or who are trying to solve specific problems.
http://www.global-village.net/products/practical_webobjects







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