How about subclass datetime.tzinfo? That way you can use asttimezone to transfer utc to localtime. It requires an aware object though not naive. A bit more coding, but a lot less converting...
Jim On Jul 3, 5:16 pm, Matt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all, > > So a lot of digging on doing this and still not a fabulous solution: > > import time > > # this takes the last_modified_date naivedatetime, converts it to a > # UTC timetuple, converts that to a timestamp (seconds since the > # epoch), subtracts the timezone offset (in seconds), and then > converts > # that back into a timetuple... Must be an easier way... > mytime = time.localtime(time.mktime(last_modified_date.utctimetuple()) > - time.timezone) > > lm_date_str = time.strftime("%m/%d/%Y %I:%M %p %Z", mytime) > > last_modified_date is a naivedatetime.datetimeobject > > A previous version gave me something like: > > mytime > =datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(time.mktime(last_modified_date.utctimetuple()) > - time.timezone) > > lm_date_str = mytime.strftime("%m/%d/%Y %I:%M %p %Z") > > But this gave me no timezone since thedatetimeobject is still > naive. And I'm going from adatetimeto a timetuple to a timestamp > back to adatetime... > > All this seems like a lot of monkeying around to do something that > should be simple -- is there a simple way to do this without requiring > some other module? > > thx > > Matt -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list