A date-time with a time-zone _in the ISO-8601 calendar system, such as {@code 2007-12-03T10:15:30+01:00 Europe/Paris}. !(p) {@code ZonedDateTime} is an immutable representation of a date-time with a time-zone. This class stores all date and time fields, to a precision of nanoseconds, and a time-zone, with a zone offset used to handle ambiguous local date-times. For example, the value "2nd October 2007 at 13:45.30.123456789 +02:00 _in the Europe/Paris time-zone" can be stored _in a {@code ZonedDateTime}. !(p) This class handles conversion from the local time-line of {@code LocalDateTime} to the instant time-line of {@code Instant}. The difference between the two time-lines is the offset from UTC/Greenwich, represented by a {@code ZoneOffset}. !(p) Converting between the two time-lines involves calculating the offset using the {@link ZoneRules rules} accessed from the {@code ZoneId}. Obtaining the offset for an instant is simple, as there is exactly one valid offset for each instant. By contrast, obtaining the offset for a local date-time is not straightforward. There are three cases: !(ul) !(li)Normal, with one valid offset. For the vast majority of the year, the normal case applies, where there is a single valid offset for the local date-time.</li> !(li)Gap, with zero valid offsets. This is when clocks jump forward typically due to the spring daylight savings change from "winter" to "summer". In a gap there are local date-time values with no valid offset.</li> !(li)Overlap, with two valid offsets. This is when clocks are set back typically due to the autumn daylight savings change from "summer" to "winter". In an overlap there are local date-time values with two valid offsets.</li> </ul> !(p) Any method that converts directly or implicitly from a local date-time to an instant by obtaining the offset has the potential to be complicated. !(p) For Gaps, the general strategy is that if the local date-time falls _in the middle of a Gap, then the resulting zoned date-time will have a local date-time shifted forwards by the length of the Gap, resulting _in a date-time _in the later offset, typically "summer" time. !(p) For Overlaps, the general strategy is that if the local date-time falls _in the middle of an Overlap, then the previous offset will be retained. If there is no previous offset, or the previous offset is invalid, then the earlier offset is used, typically "summer" time.. Two additional methods, {@link #withEarlierOffsetAtOverlap()} and {@link #withLaterOffsetAtOverlap()}, help manage the case of an overlap. !(p) In terms of design, this class should be viewed primarily as the combination of a {@code LocalDateTime} and a {@code ZoneId}. The {@code ZoneOffset} is a vital, but secondary, piece of information, used to ensure that the class represents an instant, especially during a daylight savings overlap.