Time Zone Localizations
Paul Eggert
eggert at CS.UCLA.EDU
Sat Jun 12 00:08:53 UTC 2004
"Mark Davis" <mark.davis at jtcsv.com> writes:
> If two IDs have exactly the same behavior since the time when time
> zones were adopted, and have always been in the same country over
> that period, we only want one of them to be in the main list.
If two Olson zone names are aliased via a "Link" command in the Olson
database, it could be that they are true aliases (e.g., Asia/Nicosia
and Europe/Nicosia) or it could be that they happen to be same since
1970 and differed before then but we're not sure about the details
(e.g., Europe/Oslo and Arctic/Longyearbyen) or it could be that they
happen to have been the same since time zones were introduced but
quite possibly will differ in the future (e.g., Antarctica/McMurdo and
Antarctica/South_Pole). The database itself doesn't tell you which of
these possibilities apply (though the comments give hints). However,
one can safely conclude that if the Link command is in the "backward"
or "etcetera" file then it is a true alias.
I think that for your purposes it's probably safe to ignore all Link
commands, except perhaps for those needed to establish the existence
of an Olson zone name for a particular country. If by "country"
one means ISO 3166 country code, these zone names would be:
Arctic/Longyearbyen
Europe/Bratislava
Europe/Ljubljana
Europe/San_Marino
Europe/Sarajevo
Europe/Skopje
Europe/Vatican
Europe/Zagreb
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