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Home/ Questions/Q 8101221
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 5, 20262026-06-05T22:55:53+00:00 2026-06-05T22:55:53+00:00

I know that NSDate does not represent a timezone, but perhaps someone can advise

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I know that NSDate does not represent a timezone, but perhaps someone can advise me on how to best debug its relationship to other classes, for example NSDatePicker, CalCalendarStore.

As an example, I want to set the date for a date picker to 01-01-2012. I do something like this:

newDate = [NSDate date];
NSCalendar *calendar = [NSCalendar autoupdatingCurrentCalendar];
NSDateComponents *components = [calendar components:(NSYearCalendarUnit|NSMonthCalendarUnit|NSDayCalendarUnit) fromDate:newDate];
[components setMonth:1];
[components setDay:1];
newDate = [calendar dateFromComponents:components];

This works fine in my datepicker, but as soon as I try debugging date-related code, things get very confusing (with TZ-related shifts in the hour, sometimes even day). Can someone advise me on how to do this?

If I should use a date formatter (probably!), how should I do this so I can easily debug without cluttering up the code too much?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-05T22:55:55+00:00Added an answer on June 5, 2026 at 10:55 pm

    NSDate is just a wrapper around unix time and as such is not time zone aware at all, its actually your date formatter that puts a time zone of any kind on it.

    Dealing with similar problems I ended up just forcing all my NSDate objects to use UTC dates (when not worrying about the “time” components themselves).

    You have to use a new NSCalendar instance with the timezone property set to UTC to make those dates, but this way you’re dealing with consistant dates, just use a UTC time zone set formatter to display them, or a UTC set Calendar to break them up into components as needed.

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