this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2024
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TIL: Sweden had February 30 in 1712 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1712_in_Sweden , so I decided to see how chrono handled that.

use chrono::TimeZone;
use chrono_tz::Europe::Stockholm;

fn main() {
    let feb30 =  Stockholm.ymd(1712,2,30);
    println!("Date: {:?}", feb30);
}
 target/debug/feb30
thread 'main' panicked at /home/snaggen/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/chrono-0.4.34/src/offset/mod.rs:252:40:
No such local time
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace

Result (as expected): Not well! 😄

I also tested Java with

ZonedDateTime feb30 = ZonedDateTime.of(1712,2,30, 0,0,0,0, ZoneId.of("Europe/Stockholm"));

with simmilar result

java.time.DateTimeException: Invalid date 'FEBRUARY 30'

So, lets take a minute of silence for all the programmers of history related software, may the spagetti monster have mercy on their souls.

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[–] sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 11 points 8 months ago (9 children)

Even just sticking with UNIX timestamps and relying on a library, dealing with time zones still sucks. Inevitably, your backend and frontend libraries will have some difference in some case that matters for some customer. And it won't happen just after release, but some months down the road when one country somewhere changes their laws and your libraries don't get updated in time, or maybe there's a bug like in the OP.

Madness lies everywhere when talking about time.

We should all do ourselves a favor and follow UTC time everywhere. There's still leap seconds and leap days to deal with, but so many problems just disappear if everyone uses the same time. The sun may come up at 20:00 and go down at 09:00, but your stores can just adjust their hours and it's totally fine. You won't ever have to worry about missing a meeting because the organizer's software and yours got out of sync, and you'll never have to mentally convert times on a call.

It's a small price to pay, but for all our sanity, just use UTC time.

[–] robinm@programming.dev 5 points 8 months ago (4 children)

The issue is that the notion of "tomorrow" becomes quite hard to express. If it’s 20:00 when the sun rose, when does tomorrow starts? In 5 hours ?

[–] Turun@feddit.de 2 points 8 months ago (2 children)

Most people are flexible about that already. If you stay up to ten past twelve, do you say "I really need to get to bed now, I have work tomorrow" or do you say "I really need to get to bed now, I have work today"?

The same will be true for morning and evening in everyday speech, it follows your sleep schedule, which follows the sun. Just like summer can already mean July or December, depending on your longitude.

[–] robinm@programming.dev 1 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I wasn't clear enough. But in a contry where the sun rise at 20:00, the weekday looks like:

  • day 1: Monday morning to Tuesday evening
  • day 2: Tuesday morning to Wednesday evening
  • day 3: Wednesday morning to Thurday,

And phares like "let's meet on Tuesday“ without hour indication could either mean end of day 1 or start of day 2. Likewise "let's meet the 20th” (assuming the 20th is a Tuesday) could either mean end of day 1 or beggining of day 2.

--

And alternative be to have

  • day 1 == Monday == “end of the 19th” to “the start of the 20th”
  • day 2 == Tuesday == “end of the 20th” to “the start of the 21st”
  • day 3 == Monday == “end of the 21st” to “the start of the 22nd”

Which solve the issue of "let's meet on Tuesday”, but not “let's meet the 20th”.

[–] Turun@feddit.de 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Yes, that's one actual problem that is not covered by everyday speech as it is in use today.

I think it would be very quickly solved by language evolution. E.g. we'd switch to something like "the evening on the 20th" or "the third day next week" (weeks are defined by the presence of weekends, just like they are today). But nonetheless it's a valid argument.

Edit: even today weekends cover multiple days. However you define a weekend now can probably be used to define a day in the global UTC system.

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