this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2024
76 points (97.5% liked)
Rust
5989 readers
48 users here now
Welcome to the Rust community! This is a place to discuss about the Rust programming language.
Wormhole
Credits
- The icon is a modified version of the official rust logo (changing the colors to a gradient and black background)
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Something like this?
It can support tzfile too around the wire if it starts to expose tz names in a future version.
Again, to be clear, I'm not saying it's impossible to do. But in order to do it, you have to build your own abstractions. And even then, you still can't do it because
tzfile
doesn't give you enough to do it. Andtzfile
has a platform specific API with no caching, so every time you parse a datetime with a tz ID in it, it's completely reloading the TZif data from disk.Some of these things are implementation quality issues that can be fixed. Others are library design problems where you can achieve your objective by building your own abstractions. Like do you really not see this as something that shouldn't be mentioned in a comparison between these crates? You must recognize the difference between what you're doing and just plopping a
Zoned
in your struct, derivingSerialize
andDeserialize
, and then just letting the library do the right thing for you. And that mentioning this is appropriate in the context of the "facts of comparison" because it translates into a real user experience difference for callers.If that's how it was framed in the comparison, it would have been fine. But my original objection was regarding the
Local
+FixedOffset
example which, IMVHO, toys, if ever so slightly, with disingenuity (no offense or aggression intended, I'm a fan).OK, fair enough. What should it say instead? Just omit the mention of
DateTime<Local>
? I used it because it's literally the only way toderive(Deserialize)
in Chrono in a way that gives you DST aware arithmetic on the result without getting time zone information via some out-of-band mechanism.Actually, I may have been too finicky about this myself.
Since I often write my own wrapping serialization code for use with non-serde formats, I didn't realize that
chrono::DateTime<chorono_tz::Tz>
wasn't serde-serializable, even with theserde
feature enabled for both crates. That's where the biggest problem probably lies.In the example, using
chorono_tz::Tz
, and only converting to-be-serialized values toFixedOffset
would probably put better focus on where the limitations/issues actually lie.OK, I've beefed that example up a little bit: https://github.com/BurntSushi/jiff/commit/08dfdde204c739e38147faf70b648e2d417d1c2e
I think the comparison is a bit more muddied now and probably worse overall to be honest. Maybe removing
DateTime<Local>
is the right thing to do. I'll think on it.It's a subtle comparison to make... Probably most people don't even realize that they're doing the wrong thing.