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Home/ Questions/Q 6591113
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 25, 20262026-05-25T17:23:02+00:00 2026-05-25T17:23:02+00:00

Can someone explain how d1 is greater than d2? They are the same damn

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Can someone explain how d1 is greater than d2? They are the same damn dates (or atleast that is how they look to me).

Loading development environment (Rails 3.0.8)
ruby-1.9.2-p180 :001 > d1 = Event.first.updated_at
 => Thu, 22 Sep 2011 02:24:28 PDT -07:00 
ruby-1.9.2-p180 :002 > d2 = Time.zone.parse("2011-09-22T02:24:28-07:00")
 => Thu, 22 Sep 2011 02:24:28 PDT -07:00 
ruby-1.9.2-p180 :003 > d1.class
 => ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone 
ruby-1.9.2-p180 :004 > d2.class
 => ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone 
ruby-1.9.2-p180 :005 > d1 > d2
 => true 
ruby-1.9.2-p180 :006 > 

With regards to my specific application needs … I have an iOS app that makes a request to my Rails application passing a JSON object that, amongst other items, includes NSDates in the format of “2011-09-22T02:24:28-07:00.” I’m attempting to compare that datetime with the “updated_at” which is of type ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone.

Thanks – wg

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-25T17:23:03+00:00Added an answer on May 25, 2026 at 5:23 pm

    You will find that the updated_at attribute in your Event model has a higher precision than seconds.

    Try outputting the milliseconds part of your respective time objects:

    puts d1.usec
    puts d2.usec
    

    Chances are the former will be > 0 since it was set automatically when the object was persisted, while the latter will equal 0 since you did not specify any milliseconds in the string from which you parsed it.

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