[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > John Machin wrote: > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > I know this is a trivial function, and I've now spent more time > > > searching for a surely-already-reinvented wheel than it would take to > > > reinvent it again, but just in case... is there a published, > > > open-source, function out there that takes a string in the form of > > > "hh:mm:ss" (where hh is 00-23, mm is 00-59, and ss is 00-59) and > > > converts it to an integer (ss + 60 * (mm + 60 * hh))? I'd like > > > something that throws an exception if hh, mm, or ss is out of range, or > > > perhaps does something "reasonable" (like convert "01:99" to 159). > > > Thanks, > > > --dang > > > > Have you considered time.strptime()? > > > > BTW, your function, given "00:00:00" will return 0 -- you may well have > > trouble distinguishing that from False (note that False == 0), without > > resorting to ugliness like: > > > > if result is False ... > > > > Instead of returning False for some errors and letting int() raise an > > exception for others, I would suggest raising ValueError yourself for > > *all* invalid input. > > > > You may wish to put more restrictions on the separators ... I would be > > suspicious of cases where dms[2] != dms[5]. What plausible separators > > are there besides ":"? Why allow alphabetics? If there's a use case for > > "23h59m59s", that would have to be handled separately. Note that > > "06-12-31" could be a date, "12,34,56" could be CSV data. > > > > Cheers, > > John > > Good point about 0/False. I don't think it would have bitten me in my > current program, given my expected (and filtered) inputs, but I might > have reused it in the future, and been bitten later.
The bigger pain would have been two types of error handling (try/except) *AND* if result is False > > I had looked at the time module, but apparently not long enough. > This does the trick: > > def dms2int(dms): > int(time.mktime(time.strptime("2000-01-01 %s" % dms, "%Y-%m-%d > %H:%M:%S"))) > > I only need the minutes, but can work with seconds. The only downside > is that I'm hardcoding an arbitrary date, but I can deal with that. > That's a bit too elaborate. Python gives you the hard-coded date for free -- then (you ingrate!) you ignore it, like this: |>> import time |>> dms = "23:48:59" |>> t = time.strptime(dms, "%H:%M:%S") |>> t (1900, 1, 1, 23, 48, 59, 0, 1, -1) |>> seconds = (t[3] * 60 + t[4]) * 60.0 + t[5] |>> seconds 85739.0 # assuming you do want it as a float, not an int Cheers, John -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list