mercredi 26 mars 2014

Re: datetime topic




Victor Engle wrote:

> I want to keep a collection of data organized by collection date and I'll
> use datetime like this...
>
>>>> datetime.date.today()

>
> datetime.date(2014, 3, 26)
>
>
> I'll format the date and create directories like /mydata/yyyy-mm-dd
>
>
> When I create a directory for today, I need to know the directory name for
> yesterday and tomorrow. In perl I could get seconds since the epoch using
> time and then add or subtract from that number for tomorrow or yesterday
> and feed that into localtime to get the date string.
>
>
> It would be convenient if datetime.date.today() accepted an argument as
> an offset from today, like datetime.date.today(-1). Is there an easy way
> to do this with datetime?


>>> import datetime
>>> ONE_DAY = datetime.timedelta(days=1)
>>> today = datetime.date.today()
>>> today

datetime.date(2014, 3, 26)
>>> today - ONE_DAY

datetime.date(2014, 3, 25)
>>> today + ONE_DAY

datetime.date(2014, 3, 27)







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