When creating a datetime object in a specific time zone using pytz I get a different UTC offset depending on whether I use datetime.datetime() or datetime.datetime.now().
now() seems to give the correct UTC offset for the time zone, datetime() gives an offset that I don't recognise.
Why are they different? What is the significance of the offset that datetime() assigns?
Here's my code:
import datetime
import pytz
la_paz = pytz.timezone('America/La_Paz')
a = datetime.datetime.now(la_paz)
print a, a.utcoffset()
# 2011-03-22 05:30:13-04:00 -1 day, 20:00:00
# -4 hours is the correct UTC offset for La Paz
b = datetime.datetime(2011, 03, 22, 5, 30, tzinfo=la_paz)
print b, b.utcoffset()
# 2011-03-22 05:30:00-04:33 -1 day, 19:27:00
# What is the significance of -4:33?