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Home/ Questions/Q 583113
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T14:45:31+00:00 2026-05-13T14:45:31+00:00

I’m working on a Rails application that’s kind of like a blog. Users create

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I’m working on a Rails application that’s kind of like a blog. Users create Entries. I’m trying to work out how to handle time storage and display. I’ve read this writeup about Rails timezone support.

It’s great but it doesn’t cover what my app needs to do. It only looks at cases where you want to convert stored time to the current logged in user’s time zone. In contrast, the effect I want is…

  • A user creates an entry in California at 10:00 a.m.

  • A couple years later he moves to New York and then at some point looks at his old entry. The “created” date should say “10:00 a.m.” He doesn’t care about time zones. He just wants to know what time of day he felt like it was when he wrote the entry.

  • If he then edits the Entry in New York the displayed “modified” date is, again, his subjective time of day when he made the edit. (Let’s assume he went to “preferences” and changed his time zone setting when he moved.)

  • Also, for the sake of thoroughness, the app should be able to report the “real” absolute time when an Entry was created or updated.

(Note — my imaginary user is a guy, but for women it should work roughly the same way.)

The way I’m thinking of implementing it is…

  • Have the attributes User#time_zone, Entry#created_at_utc, and Entry#updated_at_utc in addition to the standard created_at and updated_at.

  • The user selects their time zone from a menu when they sign up. (They can change it later if they want.)

  • The app uses User#time_zone to store created_at and updated_at in the user’s subjective local time. If it’s 10:00 a.m. for them, the app writes “10:00 a.m.” to the DB.

  • The app also saves the current UTC time in the aforementioned _utc fields to deal with the last requirement above.

Is that a good way to do it? Is there a better way?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T14:45:31+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 2:45 pm

    If you can, you should avoid storing two different sets of timestamps, and you should avoid storing any non-UTC dates. Both of these things will lead to confusion. I’m not completely sure I understand what you’re doing (though I like your idea of subjective time), but wouldn’t it be enough to just attach a time zone to every post, and always use that zone to display the times? It would default to the time zone set in the author’s account, so he could change it when he moved cross-country without affecting previous posts.

    I think that’s all you need–to attach a time zone to every post. Is that sufficient? Or am I missing some part of this?

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