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Brazil/Acre | Brazil/DeNoronha | Brazil/East | Brazil/West |
Canada/Atlantic | Canada/Central | Canada/East-Saskatchewan | Canada/Eastern |
Canada/Mountain | Canada/Newfoundland | Canada/Pacific | Canada/Saskatchewan |
Canada/Yukon | CET | Chile/Continental | Chile/EasterIsland |
CST6CDT | Cuba | EET | Egypt |
Eire | EST | EST5EDT | Etc/GMT |
Etc/GMT+0 | Etc/GMT+1 | Etc/GMT+10 | Etc/GMT+11 |
Etc/GMT+12 | Etc/GMT+2 | Etc/GMT+3 | Etc/GMT+4 |
Etc/GMT+5 | Etc/GMT+6 | Etc/GMT+7 | Etc/GMT+8 |
Etc/GMT+9 | Etc/GMT-0 | Etc/GMT-1 | Etc/GMT-10 |
Etc/GMT-11 | Etc/GMT-12 | Etc/GMT-13 | Etc/GMT-14 |
Etc/GMT-2 | Etc/GMT-3 | Etc/GMT-4 | Etc/GMT-5 |
Etc/GMT-6 | Etc/GMT-7 | Etc/GMT-8 | Etc/GMT-9 |
Etc/GMT0 | Etc/Greenwich | Etc/UCT | Etc/Universal |
Etc/UTC | Etc/Zulu | Factory | GB |
GB-Eire | GMT | GMT+0 | GMT-0 |
GMT0 | Greenwich | Hongkong | HST |
Iceland | Iran | Israel | Jamaica |
Japan | Kwajalein | Libya | MET |
Mexico/BajaNorte | Mexico/BajaSur | Mexico/General | MST |
MST7MDT | Navajo | NZ | NZ-CHAT |
Poland | Portugal | PRC | PST8PDT |
ROC | ROK | Singapore | Turkey |
UCT | Universal | US/Alaska | US/Aleutian |
US/Arizona | US/Central | US/East-Indiana | US/Eastern |
US/Hawaii | US/Indiana-Starke | US/Michigan | US/Mountain |
US/Pacific | US/Pacific-New | US/Samoa | UTC |
W-SU | WET | Zulu |
在此请不要使用任何时区列表(除 UTC 外),仅用于向后兼容。
If you disregard the above warning, please also note that the IANA timezone database that provides PHP's timezone support uses POSIX style signs, which results in the Etc/GMT+n and Etc/GMT-n time zones being reversed from common usage.
For example, the time zone 8 hours ahead of GMT that is used in China and Western Australia (among other places) is actually Etc/GMT-8 in this database, not Etc/GMT+8 as you would normally expect.
Once again, it is strongly recommended that you use the correct time zone for your location, such as Asia/Shanghai or Australia/Perth for the above examples.
[#1] aanderson at amherst dot edu [2013-12-05 04:43:56]
Don??t use 'EST', at least in PHP 5.3.3 it??s the same as 'EST5EDT' rather than being strictly standard time. The only reliable way I??ve found to interpret a time as standard time is to use a UTC-relative format such as:
$dateObject = date_create("2013-06-30 07:00:00-0500");
[#2] Samuel Horwitz [2012-03-01 05:05:07]
Take note that while EST and MST are valid, according to this list, PST and CST are not. I am not sure why, but it has caught me off guard. However, if using the DST versions of the "American" timezone strings, you have all four: EST5EDT, CST6CDT, MST7MDT and PST8PDT.