Yes, someone actually did this and I found it running on our server

  • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    As a Real Programmer™ I have developed such a deep fear of anything time and date related that I would fully endorse dispatching an API call to the tz_database instead of attempting any fucking part of this.

    Kids, it’s fine to meme about silly stuff… but date and time is deadly serious, regardless of how careful you think you’re being you are wrong.

    Do you know how many timezones there are in Indiana? No? Look it up and scream in horror.

    • sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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      7 months ago

      What if I told you that weekend days are locale dependent?!

      Time and date is the black hole where optimistic programmers go to die. Nothing is simply with localisation and if you think it is, you mustn’t have worked enough with it.

      Source: Run a system that schedules millions of interactions across the world and deeply depend on this. The amount of code to manage and/or call out to external services to give us information about time zones, summer time, locale specific settings, day names, calendar systems, week numbers etc etc.

    • AndyLikesCandy@reddthat.com
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      7 months ago

      Here’s a fun thought experiment: What gregorian year and date will the spacian date value of zero correlate to? Trick question.

      The atomic clock on the moon and every other celestial body colonized will simply start at zero, and thanks to relativity it will not actually be the same rate of time passing as on earth.

      Enjoy your nightmares.

    • Kogasa@programming.dev
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      7 months ago

      IMO every datetime should be in utc, and variables for datetimes should either be suffixed “Utc” or have a type indicating their time zone (DateTimeOffset or UtcDateTime etc). Conversion to local time happens at the last possible second (e.g. in the view model or an outbound http request parameter). Of course that doesn’t solve the problem of interoperating with other morons programmers who don’t follow these rules, but it keeps things a lot neater locally.

      Scheduling based on regional time conventions (holidays, weekends, etc) is just not great though.

      • usrtrv@lemmy.ml
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        7 months ago

        Throwing UTC everywhere doesn’t solve comparisons around leap seconds. I’m sure they’re other issues with this method, but this is kinda the point of “just use a library”. Then it’s someone else’s problem.

        • Kogasa@programming.dev
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          7 months ago

          I’m a .NET dev, I don’t have a concept of “just use a library.” Everything is a library. I don’t mean “using int for datetimes is ok as long as you label it utc,” I just mean “don’t deal with time zones.”

        • v9CYKjLeia10dZpz88iU@programming.dev
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          7 months ago

          Unix is the easiest format I’ve used. It’s easy to parse, it’s consistent, there’s not usually competing unix like formats, it converts perfectly to other time formats, most file explorers can immediately sort it correctly, and it’s clearly the date from which the universe spawned into existence.