NSDate
is a specific point in time without a time zone. Think of it as the number of seconds that have passed since a reference date. How many seconds have passed in one time zone vs. another since a particular reference date? The answer is the same.
Depending on how you output that date (including looking at the debugger), you may get an answer in a different time zone.
If they ran at the same moment, the values of these are the same. They're both the number of seconds since the reference date, which may be formatted on output to UTC or local time. Within the date variable, they're both UTC.
Objective-C:
NSDate *UTCDate = [NSDate date]
Swift:
let UTCDate = NSDate.date()
To explain this, we can use a NSDateFormatter in a playground:
import UIKit
let date = NSDate.date()
// "Jul 23, 2014, 11:01 AM" <-- looks local without seconds. But:
var formatter = NSDateFormatter()
formatter.dateFormat = "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss ZZZ"
let defaultTimeZoneStr = formatter.stringFromDate(date)
// "2014-07-23 11:01:35 -0700" <-- same date, local, but with seconds
formatter.timeZone = NSTimeZone(abbreviation: "UTC")
let utcTimeZoneStr = formatter.stringFromDate(date)
// "2014-07-23 18:01:41 +0000" <-- same date, now in UTC
The date output varies, but the date is constant. This is exactly what you're saying. There's no such thing as a local NSDate.
As for how to get microseconds out, you can use this (put it at the bottom of the same playground):
let seconds = date.timeIntervalSince1970
let microseconds = Int(seconds * 1000) % 1000 // chops off seconds
To compare two dates, you can use date.compare(otherDate)
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