I am a programming amateur and a Python newbie who needs to convert about 100,000,000 strings of the form "1999-12-30" into ordinal dates for sorting, comparison, and calculations. Though my script does a ton of heavy calculational lifting (for which numpy and psyco are a blessing) besides converting dates, it still seems to like to linger in the datetime and time libraries. (Maybe there's a hot module in there with a cute little function and an impressive set of attributes.)
Anyway, others in this group have said that the date and time libraries are a little on the slow side but, even if that's true, I'm thinking that the best code I could come up with to do the conversion looks so clunky that I'm probably running around the block three times just to go next door. Maybe someone can suggest a faster, and perhaps simpler, way. Here's my code, in which I've used a sample date string instead of its variable name for the sake of clarity. Please don't laugh loud enough for me to hear you in Davis, California. dateTuple = time.strptime("2005-12-19", '%Y-%m-%d') dateTuple = dateTuple[:3] date = datetime.date(dateTuple[0], dateTuple[1], dateTuple[2]) ratingDateOrd = date.toordinal() P.S. Why is an amateur newbie trying to convert 100,000,000 date strings into ordinal dates? To win try to win a million dollars, of course! In case you haven't seen it, the contest is at www.netflixprize.com. There are currently only about 23,648 contestants on 19,164 teams from 151 different countries competing, so I figure my chances are pretty good. ;-) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list