The TimeZone class represents a time zone; it is used with the Calendar and DateFormat classes.
As an abstract class, TimeZone cannot be directly instantiated. Instead, you should call the static getDefault() method to obtain a TimeZone object that represents the time zone inherited from the host operating system. Or, you should call getTimeZone() (also static), passing the name of the desired zone. You can obtain a list of the supported time zone names by calling the static getAvailableIDs() method.
Once you have a TimeZone object, you can call inDaylightTime() to determine whether, for a given Date, daylight savings time is in effect for that time zone. Call getID() to obtain the name of the time zone, and call getOffset() for a given date to determine the number of milliseconds to add to GMT to convert to the time zone.
public abstract class TimeZone extends Object implements Serializable, Cloneable {
// Default Constructor: public TimeZone()
// Class Methods
public static synchronized String[] getAvailableIDs(int rawOffset);
public static synchronized String[] getAvailableIDs();
public static synchronized TimeZone getDefault();
public static synchronized TimeZone getTimeZone(String ID);
public static synchronized void setDefault(TimeZone zone);
// Public Instance Methods
public Object clone(); // Overrides Object
public String getID();
public abstract int getOffset(int era, int year, int month, int day, int dayOfWeek, int milliseconds);
public abstract int getRawOffset();
public abstract boolean inDaylightTime(Date date);
public void setID(String ID);
public abstract void setRawOffset(int offsetMillis);
public abstract boolean useDaylightTime();
}
SimpleTimeZone
Calendar(), Calendar.getInstance(), Calendar.setTimeZone(), DateFormat.setTimeZone(), GregorianCalendar(), TimeZone.setDefault()
Calendar.getTimeZone(), DateFormat.getTimeZone(), TimeZone.getDefault(), TimeZone.getTimeZone()