But <meta property="article:published_time"> on this site can't be trusted. Sometimes it gives a wrong date, for example: http://prizyv.tv/2008/11/post-27473/ "-0001-11-30T00:00:00+00:00". This is why I use @datetime(+3). Why is it +4 here then? Because until 2014 year, Russia had summer time (google "summer time russia"). So you're posting an issue that before 2014 my template has dates one hour later? Does it really matter if an article posted before 2014 has date one hour later or earlier? I hope admins will decline this because it's madness.
And if we consider summer time (that existed 5 years ago) it would be absolutely impossible to use @datetime(+3) on Russian sites, because we don't have functions to detect summer time. I believe that's not such a critical issue to do that.
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I understand now; Eaxon, you're pointing to the date in <meta property="article:published_time">.
But <meta property="article:published_time"> on this site can't be trusted. Sometimes it gives a wrong date, for example: http://prizyv.tv/2008/11/post-27473/ "-0001-11-30T00:00:00+00:00". This is why I use @datetime(+3). Why is it +4 here then? Because until 2014 year, Russia had summer time (google "summer time russia"). So you're posting an issue that before 2014 my template has dates one hour later? Does it really matter if an article posted before 2014 has date one hour later or earlier? I hope admins will decline this because it's madness.
And if we consider summer time (that existed 5 years ago) it would be absolutely impossible to use @datetime(+3) on Russian sites, because we don't have functions to detect summer time. I believe that's not such a critical issue to do that.