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19:00
Have you tried saving UTC, then displaying the time to the user in their local time?
gonna walk up and down my stairs until I do
Like everyone's telling you to do?
What is the better thing to do
To select before ordering
user47589
@BrianJ you're closer, you know to use DateTimeOffset
I mean to order before select
or after select
19:01
1. User selects a (local) time in the datepicker.
2. You create a DateTimeOFfset instance, passing it the time from #1 and the user's local UTC offset.
3. ...
4. Profit (and correct date handling)!
@Amy yep I need to think about it
@Obviously Select what? Where?
in a linq query
user47589
@Obviously it is not obvious to us what you're talking about
19:02
@Obviously Are you sorting by the same field you're selecting?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan ok that makes a bit more sense :)
Then it doesn't really matter, as long as you make sure you're not materializing the query before sorting.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan that makes sense
dbSet.OrderBy(entity => entity.Name).Select(entity => entity.Name) should generate equivalent SQL to dbSet.Select(entity => entity.Name).OrderBy(name => name)
But of course, it should be very easy to check.
Don't trust us fictional characters on the internet. Test it!
19:04
You can skip the lambda in the second orderby, can't you?
@VeronicaDeane I think it has to have it, doesn't it?
damn you're right
stupid inconsistent API
yeah, and no built in "id" function to just throw in there
lol SO jobs has the company for you! stackoverflow.com/jobs/companies/kingdom99
@VeronicaDeane Dunno. From a purely linguistic perspective, Any() and Count() and FirstOrDefault() with no parameter work better for me than OrderBy() with no parameter.
19:07
@ReedCopsey That's guaranteed to confuse the hell out of a lot of people
Ugh, I hate that feature.
.OrderBy(id)
of course it orders by ID
what are you talking about
most functional languages (and all of this was stolen from functional languages) have an "id" function that returns itself
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan is a DateTimeOffset still stored the same on SQL server as a DateTime, or would I need to change the type?
so you could do sortBy id instead of sortBy (x -> x) or whatever
19:08
@ReedCopsey It doesn't return itself, it returns its argument
silly
sort = sortBy id
@BrianJ Dunno. We store all our dates as bigint for milliseconds since the Unix epoch, in UTC.
there you go
yeah - easy enough to make your own Order extension method to do it - but that sounds stupid :p
why the C# team decided to use such silly names for LINQ I'll never know
19:09
If it doesn't have SQL names, you scare people.
Let the C#-sucks circlejerk begin
Count with no parameters would return the total count, unfiltered. FirstOrDefault would return the first item (unfiltered). OrderBy with no parameters? It feels off.
What would it sort by if there's no IComparable implementation?
most developers bitch about how they hate SQL, then they go and try to reimplement it everywhere :p
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan That's because of the By
@VeronicaDeane Sure, but not only. What would the behavior be for an EF entity?
19:10
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan It would require IComparable, naturally
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan I think I have a part solution then. Just need to figure out displaying the times in local after that's implemented.
@VeronicaDeane Exactly, which would mean that it's the exceptional case. The standard case has no real meaning for an empty OrderBy.
ugh, just thinking about how broken interfaces are is depressing now
@BrianJ Take the bigint, convert to DateTimeOffset, use the user's local time.
when I read it back from the DB, convert to DateTimeOffset, does that then in turn convert to the user's local time?
just throwing some questions out there before I attempt implementing
19:13
@BrianJ If you instantiate the DateTimeOffset with the user's timezone, yes.
DateTimeOffset.FromUnixTimeMilliseconds(bigint).
> The Offset property value of the returned DateTimeOffset instance is TimeSpan.Zero, which represents Coordinated Universal Time. You can convert it to the time in a specific time zone by calling the TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(DateTimeOffset, TimeZoneInfo) method.
ok that's clearer, so I do a DateTimeOffset.FromUnixTimeMilliseconds(bigint).
Then convert that DateTimeOffset to the local time with..

TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(DateTimeOffset, TimeZoneInfo)

Potential problems I can see are, my model type for times is DateTime, server is DateTime also I think (don't have code now).

So when I pass in the DateTime initially..convert to DateTimeOffset and try to insert into the DB it may not like it.

Also when I read back the DateTime, there may be a problem doing the above conversion you mentioned..What type is TimeZoneInfo or where did it come from?
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan
@ReedCopsey - I don't hate SQL, but I do enjoy the ease of using LINQ expressions instead.
user47589
@BrianJ uh, the TimeZoneInfo's type is TimeZoneInfo
user47589
it's in the system namespace
user47589
19:26
maybe i'm misunderstanding your question
@BrianJ Create the initial DateTimeOffset with the user's timezone, then call ToUniversalTime to get the UTC time. From this point on, you don't care about timezones anymore.
It's a UTC DateTimeOffset. You can convert it to a UTC DateTime if you like. Or a long. Whatever.
user47589
(unless you need to know the users timezone) most of the time you don't.
When you're reading it back, do the opposite - convert your UTC DateTime to a DateTimeOffset, and set its offset to the user's time zone.
These two aren't related. Let's say User #1 chooses 10:00am in Israel (UTC+2). You take that 10:00am DateTime and create a DateTimeOffset with it (ctor parameters are the dateime and UTC+2).
Now convert it to UTC, and you get 08:00am UTC. Now you store this 08:00am UTC datetime in your DB.
Now, User#2 in New York wants to see this data. You read 8:00am UTC from the DB, then create a DateTimeOffset from it, passing it User#2's timezone (UTC -5).
Now, when displaying this DateTimeOffset, it will show 3:00am.
Which is user #1's 10:00am.
Good evening alll
I am not sure that is very user friendly. Shouldn't the time simply be offset across the board for whichever user is viewing it?
User#1 10am : Hi
User#2 3am : Hi
Is a little offputting, and would be even stranger with date changes, for example if it were 6am and 11pm
19:33
@TravisJ For 90% of the code's lifecycle, there is no user viewing it.
@TravisJ The timestamp for your last message is 22:32 here, for me.
As in, 10:32pm.
@TravisJ Oh, I see what you're saying. Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying. User #1 will see 10:00am. User #2 will see 3:00am.
But the date in the DB will be 8:00am.
Each user will have his personal timezone used to calculate the offset.
My point was if they are viewing both pieces of data at the same time it will be confusing.
Okay, so that would be for all cases was what you meant?
@TravisJ What?
A user would only ser their localtime?
@scheien Yup. This chatroom is a good use case. All the message timestamps I see are in my local time.
1. ok I get the first part.. create a DateTimeOffset using the entered time DateTime..convert to UTC..insert that UTC DateTime into DB..fine :)

2.Right, read back that UTC DateTime..convert to DateTimeOffset..then? Convert it to a TimeZone like.. TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(DateTimeOffset, TimeZoneInfo)

Is the TimeZone a DateTime type that can be displayed or does that need to be converted again to a DateTime before displaying? Thanks for clearing this up I think I'm nearly there..
19:36
But I'm sure they're stored in UTC in SO's database.
@BrianJ TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime takes a DateTimeOffset and returns a new DateTimeOffset.
They store it as utc, but there is no storage of the offset. That is probably done client side based off your system clock.
yes they are UTC in the db
@TravisJ of course
Man chatting on mobile is hard
@TravisJ Also fine, yes. That's how we do it in our WPF app here - the client-side code calls ToLocal() to get the local time for the UTC the server supplies it.
@scheien - Everything web on mobile is hard.
user47589
19:39
nah
@scheien - I tried to ask for a ban on asking questions from phones but apparently it didn't go over well.
user47589
you just need to use JicamaJS
user47589
then mobile is a piece of cake
@Amy - The cake is a lie.
user47589
shhhhh
19:40
Imaginary piece?
oh okay so the new DateTimeOffset can be displayed in a DataTable the same as a regular DateTime?
user47589
similarly to, yes.
@Amy I used JicamaJS.Mobile and I got cream in my ear. F- would not buy again.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan so I need to call ToLocal instead?
on reading back the UTC DateTime?
19:42
@BrianJ - Just be careful you don't ToLocal to the server local time.
@TomW you shouldve read The issue regarding The cream module. Its broken.
It's a feature.
Indeed.
@BrianJ If your code is running on the client-side - yes. Let the client code convert to the right timezone.
19:44
yes that was the final question, I going to be calling DateTimeOffset and converting `TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime` in the controller when reading back, the application is sitting on a server using UTC time.

Will that convert to the user local time? or... the server's local time?
posted on June 22, 2016 by jonskeet

The first rule of Privilege Club is: You do not know you’re a member of Privilege Club. The second rule of Privilege Club is: Even if you know you’re a member of Privilege Club, you don’t know how far your membership goes. The third rule of Privilege Club is: The second rule of Privilege Club … Continue reading Thoughts on privilege →

If you're rendering the output on the server that isn't necessarily in the same TZ as the user that's going to be seeing it, use DateTimeOffset to convert to the specific TZ.
The user will be accessing the page via their browser, but the code sits on a UTC server
@BrianJ Server-side C# code?
so does creating the DateTimeOffset still create the offset for that user or in fact the offset for the server? is what is confusing me. @AvnerShahar-Kashtan
19:45
Or is there client-side js as well?
well I mean the MVC controller C# is on the server..so yeah I'm guessing
There is client side js that sets the DataTable source from the list passed from the controller
    :31294849
    DateTime myUTCDate = GetDateFromDB();
    DateTimeOffset utcOffset = new DateTimeOffset(myUTCDate, TimeSpan.Zero); // UTC Offset.
    DateTimeOffset userLocalTime = TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTime(utcOffset, currentUserTimeZoneInfo);
yes but will that be the server's DateTimeOffset , to clarify?
I've explicitly stated every timezone.
TimeSpan.Zero means it's UTC - regardless of the server's timezone.
currentUserTimeZoneInfo contains the user's timezone - regardless of the server's timezone.
ok where does currentUserTimeZoneInfo come from then?
19:49
I hear sirens.
I'm a bit slow, nearly there though
Either your user database contains it as a setting (many sites allow a user to set his preferred time zone)
Or you somehow get it from the web request itself (perhaps geolocation?)
It's up to you to get that information.
ok well that was the part that confused me
Alternately, just return the UTC date to the client, without any offsets, and let client-side javascript deal with it.
doing it on the client wouldn't be an option as I bind the list to my view as soon as it's returned from the controller
would need to do it on the server side somehow, pass the local timezone into the index method before returning
19:54
Which library are you using for that?
For the datatable binding.
just using MVC Razr form, biding to the model passed back to the view
like Input>@Model.UpdatedTime</
Don't know MVC enough to know if there's a way to insert a client-side function into that.
is there a way I could call some client side js code to get the local timezone, then return that to the controller before passing the model to the view?

Like before I do the return(myModel); call client side code for GetLocalTimeZone
user47589
yeah i've done that. have some clientside js get the browsers timezone and set it in a cookie
Absolutely not. The view is rendered and passed back to the client as one blob
wait wat
Oh.
user47589
20:00
the cookie will then be sent with all requests, so you'll always have the client timezone
Different interpretations of the question
@Amy the pull it from the cookie in the server side controller?
never done it before so open to suggestions
user47589
yes, you would access it in the server side controller
What happens if the user (is a douche and) disables js?
you are legally allowed to kill them, I believe.
user47589
20:03
Then your site probably won't work anyway.
@TomW I think "dates are displayed in UTC" is a reasonably graceful fallback, isn't it?
As long as its's properly labeled as UTC.
@TomW that's annoy
And if they file a bug saying that's wrong, then you can kill them
@TomW - Users without js have no rights.
user47589
So much killing.
20:05
@Amy would you have an example of that?
When will the bloodshed end?
user47589
no
Only when the last user
enables javascript
and no IE6
remains
user47589
get the users timezone using js and set the cookie in js. these operations are available in the documentation.
ok won't the controller fire before my view's js scripts?
20:05
@TomW - If js is disabled, inside of the noscript element, just put a css transition definition that cycles the page from black to white every 30 milliseconds indefinitely.
@BrianJ - yes
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan you mean the last user is off IE all together
user47589
your controller will run before the page is returned to the client. all subsequent requests will then have the timezone
@juanvan *shrug*. IE11 is good enough.
user47589
it's not a complicated thing to do. its like 10 lines of JS
Alternatively, running a script as the page loads to replace the milliseconds with a local time would execute without anyone even seeing it run
20:08
sup nerds
@TravisJ @Amy so if the controller fires before my view scripts, then getting the timezone after my controller is too late. As the controller needs the timezone the first time it is loaded to create an offset
user47589
is this the first page on your site that the user will see?
Anyway, I'm off.
user47589
if so, make it the second.
@BrianJ - I think Amy's point was that the user will have interacted prior to that page load.
20:09
Good luck @BrianJ and everyone.
user47589
then the page will have the timezone.
user47589
The user should interact with your site somehow before datetime data is presented to them
Either that or she was just trying to get a free starbucks coffee.
user47589
shush @TravisJ
user47589
20:10
i guess i'm not getting my coffee now.
user47589
:(
@ShotgunNinja wow, long time no see. What's up?
There are no words
user47589
@ShotgunNinja hey dude
You missed the grand Ice Age
20:11
And the massive Thaw Age
And the great thawing
user47589
@TravisJ i have seven words for you.
That looked like 6 plus my name
user47589
your name is a word
your name is a word
20:12
my name is a dword
@Amy ok that is an option but would require more of a rework, @TravisJ what page event runs as the page loads? I know document.ready would be too late?
$(document).on("pageload",function() maybe?
@BrianJ - You don't need an event, just use a script right after you do the razor call
user47589
it's a rework to make this page the second page the user visits?
user47589
i dont understand how that means reworking things.
Well I assume it's currently the first page the user visits
In order to be different, something has to change.
Otherwise it would be the same.
20:14
@Amy not really but I guess I'd prefer this page to load first
user47589
then you can't get the clients TZ
@TravisJ by right after I do the razr call you mean when exactly?
@BrianJ
@DrawMahSheet()
<script>function fixMahSheet()</script>
oh okay
Yup, it should take roughly 200 microseconds to execute
20:16
Well, I'm gonna be back soon, getting back into Unity dev
ok I think that's an acceptable level of microseconds
:P
I have only one thing to say
any standard methods of getting the browser timezone in js, moment js?
In general anything that executes on the page which takes less than a millisecond can be assumed to not show the change. I believe that anything above a 2 millisecond execution produces a slight flash to the user. And then anything above 2 milliseconds can start to become more visually obvious and slightly jarring.
20:21
The word for word is word.
!!> new Date();
@TravisJ "2016-06-22T20:22:24.002Z"
@TravisJ 2 milliseconds... really?
a single screen update takes 16ms
it's impossible for something to flash for 2ms
@VeronicaDeane - Your first example is terribly flawed. You can animate something over a 16ms timespan on a webpage.
The second is also not impossible.
If you are making changes while iterating then the changes will occur at a very high rate.
at a 60Hz refresh rate, it is
20:24
Can a control be part-way through a rendering change when the screen is drawn?
ok Date.getTimezoneOffset()
That would be noticeable.
no idea how browsers render
@VeronicaDeane - That is not a proper analogy. By your metric nothing would change faster than once per second which is clearly not how anything on a computer works.
Er
20:25
I have no idea what you mean
Hz is per second
Who said anything about one second
1/60 of a second
not 1 second
ok fair enough I get the Date.getTimezoneOffset() before the controller is called in the page load. But how does my controller get that Date.getTimezoneOffset()?
Do I need to do something extra to then pass it to the controller?
20:27
Ah, right, so 1.6 milliseconds then. Hm, perhaps.
Although, many displays are above the 60hz rate now
again, where does that number come from?
1/60 of a second
@TravisJ Pretty sure there are no 500Hz displays
240hz
@TravisJ um... lol
nice math
20:28
I know I could send in an ajax post, but that will send the Timezone to the Httppost method and not the Index method called initially..
Wow, okay so clearly not working well with your Hz comment.
Either way, it is wrong.
What is wrong?
Maybe 1.6 milliseconds would have been accurate. But not 16.
er
no
1/60 of a second is 16ms
Yes. A page can update faster than that.
20:31
That is irrelevant to the user
that's my point
thanks for help anyways, I'll figure out the rest tomorrow
@VeronicaDeane - How is it irrelevant. It is noticible.
A "2ms flash" would probably not even render
so it is obviously not noticeable
The only way that would happen is if it had to change a large amount of items. It could take 100ms to execute and only be changed sections at a 2ms rate.
I don't understand your statement that 1ms changes are invisible yet 2ms is noticeable
20:36
It is twice as long.
hi guys, do you know game RecWar?
user47589
never heard of it
2d game, steering tanks
user47589
i've heard of it now
now you can see it
so it's quite familiar
user47589
20:38
Nope, it's not familiar.
user47589
I've only heard of it, just now.
and saw it
user47589
I have seen it.
you must admit
user47589
We need scratch-and-sniff monitors.
20:39
I've only seen it once, and I'm still looking at it to this day.
user47589
That way I can smell the game too.
eyes and ears, does one need any more stuff to call something familiar?
user47589
sorcerers have familiars
@VeronicaDeane - How much UX have you done professionally?
I thought familiars were more of a wizard thing.
20:41
@TravisJ Not a whole lot, I just implement requirements.
Witches have familiars. I've never heard of a wizard or sorcerer having a familiar
Isn't a witch just a lady wizard?
Or a lady warlock?
wizard I think
Or a hag
Okay, well, after a while you just get a feel for this type of stuff. Some things are inherently jarring. If you look at page loads for a long time of the same feature, little things really start to stand out. So that is where that comment comes from.
20:42
Depends on what you have in your universe.
However, I can also empirically show you the flash versus not.
@TravisJ I would love that
user47589
maybe its wizzards with familiars.
user47589
witch isn't the female equivalent of wizzard. wizzards can be men or women. to become a wizzard requires formal training. witches don't receive formal training.
@VeronicaDeane - So here are two fiddles, each waits 1.5 seconds before changing the text color to red and then blue. One changes the color to red for only 1 millisecond, and the other changes the color to red for 2 milliseconds. The 2 millisecond example slightly flashes red before being blue. There isn't really anything detectable in the first.
1:https://jsfiddle.net/3b1bb1rt/
2:https://jsfiddle.net/b06u48at/
20:44
Stop misspelling wizard
so what is the male equivalent of witch?
Maybe a warlock?
Or a brujo?
@TravisJ That's a poor example, since there's no guarantee of how long the delay is
setTimeout isn't usually accurate to the millisecond
@VeronicaDeane - Not when abused. But when there are only two, and they are not looped, it is pretty accurate.
20:46
has any of you ever played medieval total war game?
@Amy Equal Rites
@Dartek12 yup
yupi
@TravisJ hmm, did some timing, and is is in fact firing right on the ms
However, the flash doesn't seem to be affected much by the difference
it's maybe 3/4 of the time, both with 1ms and 2ms
@VeronicaDeane - It isn't a perfect example, but that was as close as I could get.
Most of the time it is pretty hard to predict if something will look off until you just observe it though. So it isn't like there is a perfect way of drawing a line in the sand at 1 or 2 milliseconds, it is just what I have seen from experience.

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