Python Datetime Module

The Datetime module allows us to work with date and time objects. It provides three additional data types: date, time and datetime.

import datetime

date()

datetime.date(year: int, month: int, day: int)

The date method return a date object with the year, month and day attributes:

>>> from datetime import date
>>> obj = date(2022, 12, 1)
>>> obj.year
# 2022
>>> obj.month
# 12
>>> obj.day
# 1

time()

datetime.time(hour: int, minute: int, second: int)

The time method return a time object with the hour, minute, second, microsecond and tzinfo attributes:

>>> from datetime import time
>>> obj = time(10, 20, 33)
>>> obj.hour
# 10
>>> obj.second
# 33
>>> obj.microsecond
# 0

datetime()

datetime.datetime(year, month, day, hour, minute, second)

The datetime returns an object with both, the date and time objects attributes:

>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> obj = datetime(2024, 12, 1, 15, 35, 59)
>>> obj.year
# 2024
>>> obj.month
# 12
>>> obj.day
# 1
>>> obj.hour
# 15
>>> obj.second
# 59

now() and today()

now and today methods return a datetime object with system’s exact day and time:

>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> now = datetime.now()
>>> now
# datetime.datetime(2022, 7, 23, 19, 56, 49, 589806)

Because the object returned is a datetime, we can access both, date and time attributes:

>>> now.date()
# datetime.date(2022, 7, 23)
>>> now.time()
# datetime.time(19, 56, 49, 589806)
>>> now.year
# 2022
>>> now.month
# 7
>>> now.day
# 23
>>> now.hour
# 19
>>> now.minute
# 56
>>> now.second
# 49
>>> now.microsecond
# 589806

Additionally, now can take a timezone object as an optional parameter:

>>> from datetime import datetime, timezone
>>> datetime.now(timezone.utc)
# datetime.datetime(2022, 7, 24, 0, 20, 8, 265634, tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc)

If a timezone parameter is not specified, now will default to the system timezone.

strftime() and strptime()

You can easily transform between strings and datetime objects with the strftime and strptime methods.

strftime()

strftime allow us to create human formatted strings out of a Python datetime object:

>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> now = datetime.now()
>>> now
# datetime.datetime(2022, 7, 23, 20, 31, 19, 751479)

>>> now.strftime("%d-%b-%Y")
# '23-Jul-2022'

>>> now.strftime("%d-%m-%Y")
# '23-07-2022'

>>> now.strftime("%d-%b-%Y")
# '23-Jul-2022'

>>> now.strftime("%d-%m-%Y")
# '23-07-2022'

>>> now.strftime("%m/%d/%Y")
# '07/23/2022'

>>> now.strftime("%b/%d/%Y - %H:%M:%S")
# 'Jul/23/2022 - 20:31:19'

You may find the strings passed to strftime to be a little strange, but it is pretty easy to understand its meaning. For example, %m/%d/%Y will return the month, day, and year separated by / (07/23/2022).

strptime()

The strptime method creates a datetime object from a string.

This method accepts two parameters:

obj.strptime(datetime_string, format)
  • A string representing a datetime object.
  • The python format code equivalent to that string.
>>> from datetime import datetime

>>> datetime_str = '12-Jul-2023'
>>> datetime.strptime(datetime_str, '%d-%b-%Y')
# datetime.datetime(2023, 7, 12, 0, 0)

>>> datetime_str = 'Jul/12/2023 - 14:38:37'
>>> datetime.strptime(datetime_str, "%b/%d/%Y - %H:%M:%S")
# datetime.datetime(2023, 7, 12, 14, 38, 37)

Format Codes

DirectiveMeaningExample
%aWeekday as locale’s abbreviated name.Sun, Mon, …, Sat (en_US)
%AWeekday as locale’s full name.Sunday, Monday, …, Saturday (en_US)
%wWeekday as a decimal number, where 0 is Sunday and 6 is Saturday.0, 1, …, 6
%dDay of the month as a zero-padded decimal number.01, 02, …, 31
%bMonth as locale’s abbreviated name.Jan, Feb, …, Dec (en_US)
%BMonth as locale’s full name.January, February, …, December (en_US)
%mMonth as a zero-padded decimal number.01, 02, …, 12
%yYear without century as a zero-padded decimal number.00, 01, …, 99
%YYear with century as a decimal number.0001, 0002, …, 2013, 2014, …, 9998, 9999
%HHour (24-hour clock) as a zero-padded decimal number.00, 01, …, 23
%IHour (12-hour clock) as a zero-padded decimal number.01, 02, …, 12
%pLocale’s equivalent of either AM or PM.AM, PM (en_US)
%MMinute as a zero-padded decimal number.00, 01, …, 59
%SSecond as a zero-padded decimal number.00, 01, …, 59
%fMicrosecond as a decimal number, zero-padded on the left.000000, 000001, …, 999999
%zUTC offset in the form ±HHMM[SS[.ffffff]] (empty string if the object is naive).(empty), +0000, -0400, +1030, +063415, -030712.345216
%ZTime zone name (empty string if the object is naive).(empty), UTC, GMT
%jDay of the year as a zero-padded decimal number.001, 002, …, 366
%UWeek number of the year (Sunday as the first day of the week) as a zero padded decimal number. All days in a new year preceding the first Sunday are considered to be in week 0.00, 01, …, 53
%WWeek number of the year (Monday as the first day of the week) as a decimal number. All days in a new year preceding the first Monday are considered to be in week 0.00, 01, …, 53
%cLocale’s appropriate date and time representation.Tue Aug 16 21:30:00 1988 (en_US)
%xLocale’s appropriate date representation.08/16/88 (None)
%XLocale’s appropriate time representation.21:30:00 (en_US)
%%A literal '%' character.%

timedelta()

The timedelta object represents the difference between two dates or times.

>>> from datetime import datetime

>>> date_1 = datetime.strptime('12-Jul-2023', '%d-%b-%Y')
>>> date_2 = datetime.strptime('01-Jan-2024', '%d-%b-%Y')

>>> difference = date_2 - date_1
>>> difference
# datetime.timedelta(days=173)
>>> difference.days
# 173

timedelta can add days, seconds and microseconds to a datetime object:

>>> from datetime import datetime, timedelta

>>> now = datetime.now()
>>> now
# datetime.datetime(2022, 7, 23, 21, 25, 2, 341081)

>>> now + timedelta(days=10, seconds=15)
# datetime.datetime(2022, 8, 2, 21, 25, 17, 341081)

And can subtract days, seconds and microseconds to a datetime object:

>>> from datetime import datetime, timedelta

>>> now = datetime.now()
>>> now
# datetime.datetime(2022, 7, 23, 21, 25, 2, 341081)

>>> now - timedelta(days=10, seconds=15)
# datetime.datetime(2022, 7, 13, 21, 59, 41, 100883)

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