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Browse All TopicsHello Experts,
I'm writing a support request form, ann need to add a timestamp. For this, I'm using Now() and it gives me:
11/7/2009 9:51:33 AM
Which is fine, except the time should be 11:51:31 AM.
I suspect that GoDaddy is on a different time zone.
Is there any way to add 2 hours? Ex: =Now() + 2?
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When servers and clients are in different timezones, you need to take great care in how you manage the dates. If different clients/servers are each storing dates in their local time zone, then chaos reigns.
The foundation principal is to choose a universal timezone for storing all datetimes. Then convert to/from the local timezone for presentation only. Often GMT is used because functions are readily available for dealing with that timezone. But it really doesn't matter what time zone you use for storing datetimes, as long as you're consistent.
In your case, let's assume you assume the timezone of the Godaddy server is 2 hours off and then hardcode that in your SQL. What happens if someone wants to use your application from a different timezone. Or what happens if godaddy decides to relocate their data center. Or, what happens, heaven forbid, if godaddy spreads your workload over different servers in different timezones?
Rather than hardcoding 2 hours, I urge you to standardize on a specific timezone for date storage and dynamically adjust to the local timezone of the clients.
Do a web search for SQL + timezone for a wealth of information on the topic.
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by: dqmqPosted on 2009-11-07 at 09:15:51ID: 25767118
DateAdd("h",2, now())
However, see followup discussion.