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I'm now going through the process of making a django application time zone aware. Initially, the TIME_ZONE setting was set to "America/Los_Angeles", but I've decided that it's probably more standard to make it "UTC".

I discovered some unintended behavior when I render a datetime to a web page in Javascript like so (start_date is a naive datetime that I define earlier in the view):

django view: cal_start_date = time.mktime(start_date.timetuple())

js: startDate = new Date(response.cal_start_date * 1000)

Depending on the TIME_ZONE I set in settings.py, I get a different timestamp for cal_start_date which is understandable: the time.mktime method returns a floating point number representing the number of seconds since the epoch (01/01/1970). However, the number of seconds since the epoch depends on the time zone we are referring to. I believe that time.mktime is automatically taking the TIME_ZONE setting as the one to use for this reference, right?

In general, is it bad practice to change the django TIME_ZONE setting?

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Take a look this answer:

time.mktime() assumes that the passed tuple is in local time, calendar.timegm() assumes it's in GMT/UTC. Depending on the interpretation the tuple represents a different time, so the functions return different values (seconds since the epoch are UTC based).

The difference between the values should be equal to the time zone offset of your local time zone.

I also recomend you ensure that USE_TZ = True in your settings.py

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