EST is UTC – 5 hours. America/New_York is EST in the winter and E*D*T in the summer, so right now New York is UTC – 4 hours.
More Related Contents:
- How to handle calendar TimeZones using Java?
- How to tackle daylight savings using TimeZone in Java
- java Calendar, Date, and Time management for a multi-timezone application
- Java: How do you convert a UTC timestamp to local time?
- How to get the day from timezone in java [duplicate]
- How can I get the current date and time in UTC or GMT in Java?
- Dates with no time or timezone component in Java/MySQL
- Calendar date to yyyy-MM-dd format in java
- Timezone conversion
- How to subtract X days from a date using Java calendar?
- Date and time conversion to some other Timezone in java
- Convert String to Calendar Object in Java
- How to change TIMEZONE for a java.util.Calendar/Date
- How to get the current date and time of your timezone in Java?
- Unable to obtain ZonedDateTime from TemporalAccessor using DateTimeFormatter and ZonedDateTime in Java 8
- Understanding the Etc/GMT time zone
- Java Time Zone is messed up
- Why Java Calendar set(int year, int month, int date) not returning correct date? [duplicate]
- Why does Java’s Date.getYear() return 111 instead of 2011?
- how to add days to java simple date format
- How to Parse Date from GMT TimeZone to IST TimeZone and Vice Versa in android
- Java: Get month Integer from Date
- How to sanity check a date in Java
- Java 8 timezone conversions
- Get TimeZone offset value from TimeZone without TimeZone name
- Java Time Zone When Parsing DateFormat
- Strange Java Timezone Date Conversion Problem
- Java 8: Calculate difference between two ZonedDateTime
- Date object to Calendar [Java]
- calculate business days including holidays