Using UTC
ISO 8601 (MSDN datetime formats)
Console.WriteLine(DateTime.UtcNow.ToString("s") + "Z");
2009-11-13T10:39:35Z
The Z is there because
If the time is in UTC, add a 'Z'
directly after the time without a
space. 'Z' is the zone designator for
the zero UTC offset. "09:30 UTC" is
therefore represented as "09:30Z" or
"0930Z". "14:45:15 UTC" would be
"14:45:15Z" or "144515Z".
If you want to include an offset
int hours = TimeZoneInfo.Local.BaseUtcOffset.Hours;
string offset = string.Format("{0}{1}",((hours >0)? "+" :""),hours.ToString("00"));
string isoformat = DateTime.Now.ToString("s") + offset;
Console.WriteLine(isoformat);
Two things to note: + or - is needed after the time but obviously + doesn't show on positive numbers. According to wikipedia the offset can be in +hh format or +hh:mm. I've kept to just hours.
As far as I know, RFC1123 (HTTP date, the "u" formatter) isn't meant to give time zone offsets. All times are intended to be GMT/UTC.
UtcNow.ToString(s)+Z
is the wrong one. ISO8601 is supported by the RoundTrip optionToString("O")
. Also to point out that the accepted answer uses the UTC value of the datetime, which would always give timezone Z, rather than just using the actual datetime value, which (if Kind=Local) may contain a daylight saving timezone. Consider changing the accepted answer? – Richardissimo May 7 '18 at 6:15