How can I find out which NSTimeZone a given longitude and latitude fall in?
2 Answers
I have tried APTimeZones library. In my case I needed Timezone as well as country name from the lat long of a particular city.
I went through the library to know how it works. It actually has a file in JSON format which has all the timezones along with their corresponding lat longs. it takes the lat long as input and loops through this JSON file comparing the distances of all the timezone's lat long from the input lat long. It returns the time zone which has shortest distance from the input lat long.
But the problem was for a city in the border of a big country, it returned me the timezone of neighbouring country, as I also extracted the country code from it, I got the neighbouring country.
So Apple's native framework is far good in this case.
And the below code worked for me well.
CLLocation *location = [[CLLocation alloc] initWithLatitude:your_latitude longitude:your_longitude];
CLGeocoder *geoCoder = [[CLGeocoder alloc]init];
[geoCoder reverseGeocodeLocation: location completionHandler:^(NSArray *placemarks, NSError *error)
{
CLPlacemark *placemark = [placemarks objectAtIndex:0];
NSLog(@"Timezone -%@",placemark.timeZone);
//And to get country name simply.
NSLog(@"Country -%@",placemark.country);
}];
In Swift
let location = CLLocation(latitude: your_latitude, longitude: your_longitude)
let geoCoder = CLGeocoder()
geoCoder.reverseGeocodeLocation(location) { (placemarks, err) in
if let placemark = placemarks?[0] {
print(placemark.timeZone)
print(placemark.country)
}
}
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2This is the most elegant solution without a 3rd party library! I can't believe there's a timeZone property on a CLPlacemark :) – PostCodeism Nov 14 '17 at 02:04
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1Yes dude, It was worth a share so I did.. Happy coding :) – Roohul Nov 14 '17 at 12:35
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since ios11, macOS10.13 it is public framework, no need to look at other solutions – Marek H Sep 18 '18 at 08:51
Here is the trick that worked for me. From which timezone identifier can be extracted and you can use this id for timezone.
CLLocation *location = [[CLLocation alloc] initWithLatitude:latitude longitude:longitude];
[geoCoder reverseGeocodeLocation:location completionHandler:^(NSArray *placemarks, NSError *error) {
if (error == nil && [placemarks count] > 0) {
placeMark = [placemarks lastObject];
NSRegularExpression *regex = [NSRegularExpression regularExpressionWithPattern:@"identifier = \"[a-z]*\\/[a-z]*_*[a-z]*\"" options:NSRegularExpressionCaseInsensitive error:NULL];
NSTextCheckingResult *newSearchString = [regex firstMatchInString:[placeMark description] options:0 range:NSMakeRange(0, [placeMark.description length])];
NSString *substr = [placeMark.description substringWithRange:newSearchString.range];
NSLog(@"timezone id %@",substr);
}];
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Yes this is apple's private framework, but if you get it from native framework then it is best rather than using third party library. – Dharmesh Vaghani Jul 02 '15 at 05:37
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This displays the user's time and timezone, not that of the location. iOS 13.4 – Mike Taverne May 25 '20 at 22:31