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Setting the system date in Python (on Windows)

There appears to be many packages for getting/formatting the current date, or finding out the date n time intervals from now. But I must be overlooking the existence of a simple method to set the date (like Windows' date.exe) in Python.

Surely such a function exists? I've been unable to find anything on Google, the python docs (datetime, time, os, etc) or stack overflow. TIA.

edit: To summarize,this page tells you how to get them.

And you can set them using either

win32api.SetSystemTime(year,month,dayOfWeek,day,hour,minute,second,millseconds)

or

os.system("date " + mm/dd/yy)

date.exe also appears to accept mm-dd-yy, 4-digit years, and probably other alternatives.

I prefer the latter for simplicity.

like image 523
Gary Oldfaber Avatar asked Jul 19 '10 13:07

Gary Oldfaber


2 Answers

You should be able to use win32api.SetSystemTime. This is part of pywin32.

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Matthew Flaschen Avatar answered Oct 07 '22 17:10

Matthew Flaschen


Can you not use os.system("shell_cmd_in_here") to call the linux cmd:

date -s "2 OCT 2010 18:00:00"

This would set the system date to: 2 Oct 2010 18:00:00 for example.

So altogether it is:

os.system('date -s "2 OCT 2010 18:00:00"')
like image 28
Martin Avatar answered Oct 07 '22 18:10

Martin