Times is a small, minimalistic, Python library for dealing with time conversions to and from timezones, for once and for all.
It is designed to be simple and clear, but also opinionated about good and bad practices.
Armin Ronacher wrote about timezone best practices in his blog post Dealing with Timezones in Python. The tl;dr summary is that everything sucks about our mechanisms to represent absolute moments in time, but the least worst one of all is UTC.
Python's datetime
library and the pytz
library are powerful, but because
they don't prescribe a standard practice of working with dates, everybody is
free to pick his or her own way.
times
tries to make working with times and timezones a little less of
a clusterfuck and hopefully set a standard of some sort.
It still uses datetime
and pytz
under the covers, but as long as you never
use any timezone related stuff outside times
, you should be safe.
Never work with local times. Whenever you must accept local time input (e.g. from a user), convert it to universal time immediately:
>>> times.to_universal(local_time, 'Europe/Amsterdam')
datetime.datetime(2012, 2, 1, 10, 31, 45, 781262)
The second argument can be a pytz.timezone
instance, or a timezone string.
If the local_time
variable already holds timezone info, you must leave out
the source timezone from the call.
To enforce best practices, times
will never implicitly convert times for you,
even if that would technically be possible.
If you want to accepting datetime representations in string form (for example, from JSON APIs), you can convert them to universal datetimes easily:
>>> import time, times
>>> print times.to_universal('2012-02-03 11:59:03-0500') # auto-detects source timezone
Times
utilizes the string parsing routines available in dateutil. Note
that the source timezone is auto-detected from the string. If the string
contains a timezone offset, you are not allowed to explicitly specify one.
If the string does not contain any timezone offset, you must specify the source timezone explicitly:
>>> print times.to_universal('2012-02-03 11:59:03', 'Europe/Amsterdam')
This is the inverse of times.format()
.
If you prefer working with UNIX (POSIX) timestamps, you can convert them to safe datetime representations easily:
>>> import time, times
>>> print times.to_universal(time.time())
2012-02-03 11:59:03.588419
Note that to_universal
auto-detects that you give it a UNIX timestamp.
To get the UNIX timestamp representation of a universal datetime, use:
>>> print times.to_unix(universal_time)
When you want to record the current time, you can use this convenience method:
>>> import times
>>> print times.now()
datetime.datetime(2012, 2, 1, 11, 51, 27, 621491)
To present times to the end user of your software, you should explicitly format your universal time to your user's local timezone.
>>> import times
>>> now = times.now()
>>> print times.format(now, 'CET')
2012-02-01 21:32:10+0100
As with the to_universal
function, the second argument may be either
a timezone instance or a timezone string.
Note: It is possible to convert universal times to local times, using
to_local
). However, you probably shouldn't do it, unless you want to
strftime()
the resulting local date multiple times. In any other case, you
are advised to use times.format()
directly instead.