Get TimeZone offset value from TimeZone without TimeZone name

Solution 1:

I need to save the phone's timezone in the format [+/-]hh:mm

No, you don't. Offset on its own is not enough, you need to store the whole time zone name/id. For example I live in Oslo where my current offset is +02:00 but in winter (due to dst) it is +01:00. The exact switch between standard and summer time depends on factors you don't want to explore.

So instead of storing + 02:00 (or should it be + 01:00?) I store "Europe/Oslo" in my database. Now I can restore full configuration using:

TimeZone tz = TimeZone.getTimeZone("Europe/Oslo")

Want to know what is my time zone offset today?

tz.getOffset(new Date().getTime()) / 1000 / 60   //yields +120 minutes

However the same in December:

Calendar christmas = new GregorianCalendar(2012, DECEMBER, 25);
tz.getOffset(christmas.getTimeInMillis()) / 1000 / 60   //yields +60 minutes

Enough to say: store time zone name or id and every time you want to display a date, check what is the current offset (today) rather than storing fixed value. You can use TimeZone.getAvailableIDs() to enumerate all supported timezone IDs.

Solution 2:

@MrBean - I was in a similar situation where I had to call a 3rd-party web service and pass in the Android device's current timezone offset in the format +/-hh:mm. Here is my solution:

public static String getCurrentTimezoneOffset() {

    TimeZone tz = TimeZone.getDefault();  
    Calendar cal = GregorianCalendar.getInstance(tz);
    int offsetInMillis = tz.getOffset(cal.getTimeInMillis());

    String offset = String.format("%02d:%02d", Math.abs(offsetInMillis / 3600000), Math.abs((offsetInMillis / 60000) % 60));
    offset = (offsetInMillis >= 0 ? "+" : "-") + offset;

    return offset;
} 

Solution 3:

With java8 now, you can use

Integer offset  = ZonedDateTime.now().getOffset().getTotalSeconds();

to get the current system time offset from UTC. Then you can convert it to any format you want. Found it useful for my case. Example : https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/datetime/iso/timezones.html

Solution 4:

With Java 8, you can achieve this by following code.

    TimeZone tz = TimeZone.getDefault();
    String offsetId = tz.toZoneId().getRules().getStandardOffset(Instant.now()).getId();

and the offsetId will be something like +01:00

Please notice the function getStandardOffset need a Instant as parameter. It is the specific time point, at which you want to check the offset of given timezone, as timezone's offset may varies during time. For the reason of some areas have Daylight Saving Time.

I think it is the reason why @Tomasz Nurkiewicz recommand not to store offset in signed hour format directly, but to check the offset each time you need it.

Solution 5:

ZoneId here = ZoneId.of("Europe/Kiev");
ZonedDateTime hereAndNow = Instant.now().atZone(here);
String.format("%tz", hereAndNow);

will give you a standardized string representation like "+0300"