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?