Not really, it sat 25:00:00 at Saturday would become 00:00:00 on Sunday It used the tine from Saturday to refer to transition that occur at Sunday 00:00. Note: I realized there is a typo in my original message. Please check the corrected text in the quoted part. 2018-09-08 15:55, Paul Eggert <eggert@cs.ucla.edu> wrote:
Phake Nick wrote:
Not really. It would mean the Saturday's clock go to 24:59 before jumping to 00:00 on Sunday. The official time the DST end is "00:00am on the next day after the second Saturday of September". So it isn't ending before the day change.
Sorry, but that reading doesn't sound plausible to me. I can't imagine a law intending to refer to 24:59.9999... on Sunday (i.e., 00:59.9999.... on Monday) talking about the transition occurring the day after Saturday. But perhaps someone can dig up a newspaper in the affected area that explains things clearly to the general populace.