I am processing records by pushing each record through validation stages, then into a database. One of the validation steps requires checking if certain columns are dates. I did this using DateTime.TryParse(s, out DateTime) assuming that this would use the configured Regional Settings on the machine on which the process was running. On my local machine, this is a wrapper class running within a command-line harness from Visual Studio (for ease of debugging). So 13/01/2010 gets formatted as 13 January 2010 as per the en-GB setting on my Windows 7 dev machine.
On pushing this onto our test server, a Windows Server 2008 R2, this wrapper class runs within a Window Service (under the LocalSystem account). Exactly the same code, I've designed it such that the service is just a thin wrapper. However, after many cycles of debugging, it seems the server is parsing 13/01/2010 as en-US and therefore failing. This is despite the Regional Settings being set to en-GB. (See screenshot)
Note that this is way before it gets to SQL Server so that is not part of this issue.
After fighting with this, I've forced the situation by using the code below and setting the required format to en-GB.
Culture = CultureInfo.CreateSpecificCulture("en-GB");
DateTimeStyles dateTimeStyles = DateTimeStyles.None;
DateTime dt;
bool pass = DateTime.TryParse(s,Culture,dateTimeStyles, out dt);
This now works. My question is, how come the Windows Service, running under Local System assumes en-US and not en-GB?