On Oct 19, 2009, at 9:41 PM, David LeBer wrote:
On 2009-10-19, at 9:36 PM, Michael Halliday wrote:On 2009-10-19, at 4:41 PM, David LeBer wrote:On 2009-10-13, at 3:58 PM, Michael Halliday wrote:It shows the following: michael$ date Tue 13 Oct 2009 15:57:50 EDTMichael, did you find a resolution for this issue?Not until now ... my timezone was set for London - Canada ... I had tried Toronto - Canada ... same issue. Didn't think to keep trying until I got one that worked!! LOL. It appears that the following two work for sure:Ottawa - Canada Montreal - CanadaHopefully Apple fixes this issue ... I thought I was going crazy there for a while. I was about to rebuild my brand new machine as well!! Just glad it wasn't a server ... that would have really screwed things up. I was getting JDBC date errors, not fun. Took me a while to realize I was dealing with different timezones!Hey Michael,I filed a radar, feel free to duplicate it if you wish (the more voices, the more likely a fix).As an alternative to changing your location in Date & Time you can explicitly set the default timezone like this:TimeZone tz = TimeZone.getTimeZone("America/Toronto"); TimeZone.setDefault(tz); NSTimeZone.setDefault(tz); This seems to work fine for me.
I do the same in the app constructor using GMT. No problems here. I can't say I've tried a Canadian time zone though (^_^) I also have a Wonder patch up on JIRA (still under consideration) if anyone is interested. It automatically adjust dates for time zones in WOStrings and WOTextfields. Those two get the value from the ERXSession instance... so set your timezone in one place and it is adjusted automatically throughout the entire app. Well, at least as far as WOStrings and WOTextfields with dateformat bindings are concerned.
http://issues.objectstyle.org/jira/browse/WONDER-279It's off by default though, since this would be a change from existing behavior. If you apply the patch, you can enable it using the property
er.extensions.ERXSession.autoAdjustTimeZone=true Ramsey
Cheers, Michael.I am seeing this on my dev machine, it's configured according to Dave Avendasora instructions:<http://wiki.objectstyle.org/confluence/display/WOL/Using+WOLips+With+Multiple+Versions+of+WebObjects >I see the same problem with WO5.3.3 and WO5.4.3, I've tried manually updating the zoneinfo.zip files with no effect.Cheers, Michael. On 2009-10-13, at 3:07 PM, Chuck Hill wrote:Open up a command line on that machine and type date: chuck$ date Tue Oct 13 12:06:50 PDT 2009 What does it show? Chuck On Oct 13, 2009, at 11:58 AM, Michael Halliday wrote:Hi, No it's for sure 00:05 ... if I run the following test: public static void main(String[] args) { Calendar now = Calendar.getInstance(); System.out.println(now.getTimeZone()); System.out.println(now.getTime()); } I get: sun .util .calendar .ZoneInfo [id = "GMT -00: 05 ",offset = -300000 ,dstSavings=0,useDaylight=false,transitions=0,lastRule=null]Tue Oct 13 18:50:58 GMT-00:05 2009 It's very strange. I did a clean install of Snow Leopard too. Cheers, Michael. On 2009-10-13, at 2:10 PM, Miguel Arroz wrote:Hi! Are you sure it's 00:05 and not 05:00? Yours Miguel Arroz On 2009/10/13, at 18:39, Michael Halliday wrote:Hey Guys,Has anyone noticed any time zone issues with Java and Snow Leopard?Ever since migrating to snow leopard, my java default timezone is GMT-00:05, when my system is actually GMT-04:00 (America/Toronto EDT).Anyone else noticing this? I'm running Mac OS X 10.6.1 with WO 5.4.3.java -version java version "1.6.0_15" Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.6.0_15-b03-219)Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 14.1-b02-90, mixed mode)Cheers, Michael.
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