In listing all the Id
properties of the TimeZoneInfo
s returned by TimeZoneInfo.GetSystemTimeZones
, two versions of EST appear: US Eastern Standard Time and Eastern Standard Time. What's the difference?
I also see both US Mountain Standard Time and Mountain Standard Time, but I'm pretty sure that's because the US version is for Arizona, which doesn't observe DST. I'd assume the regular Mountain Standard Time applies for the rest of the US states in the Mountain time zone. Am I correct?
Helpful link on US time zones: http://www.timetemperature.com/tzus/time_zone.shtml
The above answer is actually incorrect - "US Eastern Standard Time" refers to the timezone for the majority of Indiana, which did not observe Daylight Saving Time before 2007. Similarly, "Canada Central Standard Time" is used for Saskatchewan, and "US Mountain Standard Time" for Arizona, which still do not observe DST.
The time zone IDs are assigned in a somewhat illogical way. The "No DST" version mentioned for e.g. the Cayman Islands is called "SA Pacific Standard Time" (SA = South America, and if you look at a timezone map you will see that the -05:00 offset applies to Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru on the west coast of South America)
For another example of timezone IDs "Greenwich Standard Time" which refers to the time zone used in Iceland, which is UTC+00:00 year-round with no DST, whereas "GMT Standard Time" refers to the British timezone which does have DST.
Each time zone corresponds to one of the menu items that you can select from the timezone control panel. This MSDN page shows the correspondence between the text in the menu and the actual timezone ID: