23

I'm trying to convert a string "20091229050936" into "05:09 29 December 2009 (UTC)"

>>>import time
>>>s = time.strptime("20091229050936", "%Y%m%d%H%M%S")
>>>print s.strftime('%H:%M %d %B %Y (UTC)')

gives AttributeError: 'time.struct_time' object has no attribute 'strftime'

Clearly, I've made a mistake: time is wrong, it's a datetime object! It's got a date and a time component!

>>>import datetime
>>>s = datetime.strptime("20091229050936", "%Y%m%d%H%M%S")

gives AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'strptime'

How am I meant to convert a string into a formatted date-string?

sth
  • 222,467
  • 53
  • 283
  • 367
Josh
  • 7,936
  • 5
  • 41
  • 63

5 Answers5

43

For datetime objects, strptime is a static method of the datetime class, not a free function in the datetime module:

>>> import datetime
>>> s = datetime.datetime.strptime("20091229050936", "%Y%m%d%H%M%S")
>>> print s.strftime('%H:%M %d %B %Y (UTC)')
05:09 29 December 2009 (UTC)
sth
  • 222,467
  • 53
  • 283
  • 367
  • 1
    Pedantic point: It's a class method, not a static method. The difference is that class methods are passed the class itself as an argument, and can therefore behave dynamically for subclasses; alternate constructors (like `strptime`) are always (or at least should always) be class methods. – ShadowRanger Nov 30 '16 at 16:53
14

time.strptime returns a time_struct; time.strftime accepts a time_struct as an optional parameter:

>>>s = time.strptime(page.editTime(), "%Y%m%d%H%M%S")
>>>print time.strftime('%H:%M %d %B %Y (UTC)', s)

gives 05:09 29 December 2009 (UTC)

Josh
  • 7,936
  • 5
  • 41
  • 63
2
from datetime import datetime
s = datetime.strptime("20091229050936", "%Y%m%d%H%M%S")
print("{:%H:%M %d %B %Y (UTC)}".format(s))
Sandeep Datta
  • 28,607
  • 15
  • 70
  • 90
2

For me this is the best and it works on Google App Engine as well

Example showing UTC-4

import datetime   
UTC_OFFSET = 4
local_datetime = datetime.datetime.now()
print (local_datetime - datetime.timedelta(hours=UTC_OFFSET)).strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
coto
  • 2,255
  • 1
  • 19
  • 32
1

You can use easy_date to make it easy:

import date_converter
my_datetime = date_converter.string_to_string("20091229050936", "%Y%m%d%H%M%S", "%H:%M %d %B %Y (UTC)")
Raphael Amoedo
  • 4,233
  • 4
  • 28
  • 37