Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How to print a date in a regular format?

This is my code:

import datetime today = datetime.date.today() print(today) 

This prints: 2008-11-22 which is exactly what I want.

But, I have a list I'm appending this to and then suddenly everything goes "wonky". Here is the code:

import datetime mylist = [] today = datetime.date.today() mylist.append(today) print(mylist) 

This prints the following:

[datetime.date(2008, 11, 22)] 

How can I get just a simple date like 2008-11-22?

like image 863
NomadAlien Avatar asked Nov 22 '08 18:11

NomadAlien


People also ask

How do I print the day of a date in Python?

First, the date is given as a string input. Define a list with the name of the days of a week named day_name. Then strptime() function formats the input string to a DD:MM:YYYY format. Finally, print the day of the date by specifying that returned integer as an index value of a list day_name.


2 Answers

The WHY: dates are objects

In Python, dates are objects. Therefore, when you manipulate them, you manipulate objects, not strings or timestamps.

Any object in Python has TWO string representations:

  • The regular representation that is used by print can be get using the str() function. It is most of the time the most common human readable format and is used to ease display. So str(datetime.datetime(2008, 11, 22, 19, 53, 42)) gives you '2008-11-22 19:53:42'.

  • The alternative representation that is used to represent the object nature (as a data). It can be get using the repr() function and is handy to know what kind of data your manipulating while you are developing or debugging. repr(datetime.datetime(2008, 11, 22, 19, 53, 42)) gives you 'datetime.datetime(2008, 11, 22, 19, 53, 42)'.

What happened is that when you have printed the date using print, it used str() so you could see a nice date string. But when you have printed mylist, you have printed a list of objects and Python tried to represent the set of data, using repr().

The How: what do you want to do with that?

Well, when you manipulate dates, keep using the date objects all long the way. They got thousand of useful methods and most of the Python API expect dates to be objects.

When you want to display them, just use str(). In Python, the good practice is to explicitly cast everything. So just when it's time to print, get a string representation of your date using str(date).

One last thing. When you tried to print the dates, you printed mylist. If you want to print a date, you must print the date objects, not their container (the list).

E.G, you want to print all the date in a list :

for date in mylist :     print str(date) 

Note that in that specific case, you can even omit str() because print will use it for you. But it should not become a habit :-)

Practical case, using your code

import datetime mylist = [] today = datetime.date.today() mylist.append(today) print mylist[0] # print the date object, not the container ;-) 2008-11-22  # It's better to always use str() because :  print "This is a new day : ", mylist[0] # will work >>> This is a new day : 2008-11-22  print "This is a new day : " + mylist[0] # will crash >>> cannot concatenate 'str' and 'datetime.date' objects  print "This is a new day : " + str(mylist[0])  >>> This is a new day : 2008-11-22 

Advanced date formatting

Dates have a default representation, but you may want to print them in a specific format. In that case, you can get a custom string representation using the strftime() method.

strftime() expects a string pattern explaining how you want to format your date.

E.G :

print today.strftime('We are the %d, %b %Y') >>> 'We are the 22, Nov 2008' 

All the letter after a "%" represent a format for something:

  • %d is the day number (2 digits, prefixed with leading zero's if necessary)
  • %m is the month number (2 digits, prefixed with leading zero's if necessary)
  • %b is the month abbreviation (3 letters)
  • %B is the month name in full (letters)
  • %y is the year number abbreviated (last 2 digits)
  • %Y is the year number full (4 digits)

etc.

Have a look at the official documentation, or McCutchen's quick reference you can't know them all.

Since PEP3101, every object can have its own format used automatically by the method format of any string. In the case of the datetime, the format is the same used in strftime. So you can do the same as above like this:

print "We are the {:%d, %b %Y}".format(today) >>> 'We are the 22, Nov 2008' 

The advantage of this form is that you can also convert other objects at the same time.
With the introduction of Formatted string literals (since Python 3.6, 2016-12-23) this can be written as

import datetime f"{datetime.datetime.now():%Y-%m-%d}" >>> '2017-06-15' 

Localization

Dates can automatically adapt to the local language and culture if you use them the right way, but it's a bit complicated. Maybe for another question on SO(Stack Overflow) ;-)

like image 94
17 revs, 13 users 59% Avatar answered Oct 04 '22 17:10

17 revs, 13 users 59%


import datetime print datetime.datetime.now().strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M") 

Edit:

After Cees' suggestion, I have started using time as well:

import time print time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M") 
like image 30
Daniel Magnusson Avatar answered Oct 04 '22 16:10

Daniel Magnusson