pytzwhere is a Python library to lookup the timezone for a given lat/lng entirely offline.
Version 3.0 fixes how pytzwhere
deals with holes in timezones. It is recommended that you use version 3.0.
It is a port from https://github.com/mattbornski/tzwhere with a few improvements. The underlying timezone data is based on work done by Eric Muller
If used as a library, basic usage is as follows:
>>> from tzwhere import tzwhere
>>> tz = tzwhere.tzwhere()
>>> print tz.tzNameAt(35.29, -89.66)
America/Chicago
The polygons used for building the timezones are based on VMAP0. Sometimes points are outside a VMAP0 polygon, but are clearly within a certain timezone (see also this discussion). As a solution you can search for the closest timezone within a user defined radius.
Dependencies:
-
numpy
(optional) -
shapely
forceTZ
If the coordinates provided are outside of the currently defined timezone boundaries, the tzwhere
function will return None
. If you would like to match to the closest timezone, use the forceTZ parameter.
Example:
>>> from tzwhere import tzwhere
>>> tz = tzwhere.tzwhere()
>>> print(tz.tzNameAt(53.68193999999999, -6.239169999999998))
None
>>> from tzwhere import tzwhere
>>> tz = tzwhere.tzwhere(forceTZ=True)
>>> print(tz.tzNameAt(53.68193999999999, -6.239169999999998, forceTZ=True))
Europe/Dublin