Calendar Types

Keean Schupke k.schupke at imperial.ac.uk
Mon Feb 14 16:07:52 EST 2005


Seth Kurtzberg wrote:

>
> There are many details which are not easy to represent with a 
> timezone.  There are places (e.g. in Indiana) where a town just over 
> the timezone line from another town uses the "wrong" timezone, in that 
> case to handle the problem that the towns have grown to the point 
> where they are actually one (virtual?) town.
>
> Arizona does not observe daylight savings time, but on some of the 
> Indian reservations daylight savings is observed.
>
> The state of Sonora, in Mexico, makes a decision periodically to 
> follow, or not follow, the fact that Arizona (its northern neighbor) 
> doesn't use daylight savings, but other Mexican states in the same 
> time zone do observe daylight savings.  In the last ten years I know 
> that the decision has changed twice, and currently Sonora follows the 
> practice of other Mexican states in the same time zone.
>
Historically, towns in the UK used to have their own time (set by 
midday) - however when the railway came, it was necessary to standardise 
time, so that train timetables could be compiled.

What do the national train/public-transport services do in these 
instances? My gut feeling would be that whatever they do would be what 
Haskell should do. I would guess that such local anomalies are ignored 
by the public transport timetables?

    Keean.


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