According to
Federico A. C. Neves and Herton Ronaldo Krzesinski there are
some exceptions to
the rule of ending DST Third Sunday of February in Brazil,
which seems to be
correct.
I just wanted to
point out that there is a Carnival dates calculator at
following Carnival
Sunday list for 2008 to 2041:
Carnival Sunday
2008-2041:
2008-02-03
2009-02-22
2010-02-14
2011-03-06
2012-02-19
2013-02-10
2014-03-02
2015-02-15
2016-02-07
2017-02-26
2018-02-11
2019-03-03
2020-02-23
2021-02-14
2022-02-27
2023-02-19
2024-02-11
2025-03-02
2026-02-15
2027-02-07
2028-02-27
2029-02-11
2030-03-03
2031-02-23
2032-02-08
2033-02-27
2034-02-19
2035-02-04
2036-02-24
2037-02-15
2038-03-07
2039-02-20
2040-02-12
2041-03-03
This basically
confirms the rules elaborated.
Note that there is a
typo "bellow" in the rules given in the earlier email,
and that perhaps
instead of giving specific dates, it might be better to
give the rule for
the exception dates like this:
+Rule Brazil 2008 2011 - Feb Sun>=15
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2012 only - Feb Sun>=22
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2013 2014 - Feb Sun>=15
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2015 only - Feb Sun>=22
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2016 2022 - Feb Sun>=15
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2023 only - Feb Sun>=22
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2024 2025 - Feb Sun>=15
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2026 only - Feb Sun>=22
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2027 2033 - Feb Sun>=15
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2034 only - Feb Sun>=22
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2035 2036 - Feb Sun>=15
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2037 only - Feb Sun>=22
0:00 0 -
+Rule Brazil 2038 max - Feb Sun>=15
0:00 0 -
This should give the
same actual dates, but will give a hint on how
the dates behave
after 2038. A bit a matter of taste I admit. Usually we
don't
give rules as
Sun>=x when this spans only one year, but here the same
rule Sun>=22 is
applied a few years later each cycle.
- Jesper Nørgaard
Welen