10:30
Hey everyone. I have a small question. I have a Django app and in this app, I want to give different users a different timezone depending on where they live. The app has features which are time-dependent. Using the default UTC might not work for everyone. I have read the Django documentation and I think I have some idea about what to do. I just need to concepts cleared before I can go making my system.
So I will use a form in each user's profile to ask them for their timezones. They will be asked to enter their timezone when they log in for the first time. From the docs, I understand I will have to create a Middleware to activate this timezone using django.utils.timezone.activate. By default, I will set everyone's timezones as UTC and as a result I believe the Middleware should activate UTC as the "current_time_zone" right?
Moving forward, if a person does change their timezone, the Middleware to handle that and activate the timezone so that the app features are localized to them. But what I am really asking it, Django states that no matter what the default or current timezone is, using timezone.now() will always use UTC.
In my app, I need to make use of datetime and timedelta objects. For example, I need to set "date created" and "date edited" attributes as well as I need to add a week or two to a specific date depending on what the user wants. So is it okay for me to do these using django.utils.timezone.localtime()? Or is it preferred to use timezone.now regardless? This is my question.
5 hours later…
15:32
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