npm install timezone-soft import soft from 'timezone-soft' // get an IANA tz from user input let timezones = soft('milwaukee')[0] /*[{ iana: 'America/Chicago', standard: { name: 'Central Standard Time', abbrev: 'CST' }, daylight: { name: 'Central Daylight Time', abbrev: 'CDT' } } ]*/IANA timezone codes are the official reference for timezone information, and is what you should use, whenever possible.
Humans though, are goofballs, and use a whole different informal scheme:
- In (North) America: PST, MST, EST...
- in Europe (lately): WEST, CEST, EEST...
- in Africa: EAT, CAT, WAST...
- in Australia: AWST, AEDT, ACST...
These names also collide -
'IST' is used to mean:
- 'Indian Stardard Time'
- 'Irish Stardard Time'
- 'Israeli Stardard Time'
These names also produce all-sorts of ambiguities, regarding DST-changes-
Both Winnipeg and Mexico City are CST, but have a much different DST schedule: 
(thanks timeanddate.com!)
-of course, there's a bunch of political/historical/disputed stuff going on, too. Apologies if this library steps into that unknowingly.
...so that's what we're trying to fix - to 'soften' this exchange, between human and IANA timezone nomenclature, using some opinionated-but-common-sense rules and decision-making.
It was originally built for use in the spacetime timezone library.
const soft = require('timezone-soft') soft('EST') // 'America/New_York' soft('central') // 'America/Chicago' soft('venezuela') // 'America/Caracas' soft('south east asia') // 'Asia/Bangkok'Typescript/Deno/Webpack:
import soft from 'timezone-soft'it was built to be as forgiving as possible, and return the most common-sense IANA timezone id from user-input.
Often, the proper timezone name will depend on which date you are referencing. You can reckon this pretty-easily with spacetime, like this:
const spacetime = require('spacetime') const soft = require('timezone-soft') let display = soft('montreal')[0] let show = display.standard.abbrev // are we in standard time, or daylight time? let s = spacetime.now(display.iana) if (display.daylight && s.isDST()) { show = display.daylight.abbrev } console.log(s.time() + ' ' + show) // '4:20pm EDT'work-in-progress!
- TimeZoneNames .NET Standard Library by Matt Johnson-Pint
MIT


