Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Mon, 28 Dec 2009 23:50:30 +1100, Ben Finney wrote:
How does one "unload" this structure to get the seconds and days?
It's customary to consult the documentation for questions like that
<URL:http://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#datetime.timedelta>.
No no no, it's customary to annoy everyone on the list by asking the
question *without* consulting the documentation, and then to be told to
Read The Fine Manual.
To be serious for a moment, if you're in the interactive interpreter, you
can get some useful information by calling help(datetime.timedelta).
Yes, thanks. I'm starting to catch on to the idea there are tools like
dir, help, doc sources, and ___dcc__ that can help. It doesn't seem to
be standard practice to more or less teach the environment that Python
is in. If they do, it's jumbled around. Most books start with Python
itself and skirt the issues of the environment and interaction. Oddly,
today I found a source that gets right into these concepts. It may have
something to do with MIT. Here's a link to one of the three section of
the reference
<http://docs.google.com/leaf?id=0B2oiI2reHOh4ZTFkY2ZmYzktZTVkZS00M2E1LTgwNDUtYWRjZTE1Nzc2ZDYz&sort=name&layout=list&pid=0B2oiI2reHOh4ZGVmNjk3MjgtZmY5YS00ZWQxLThkNWMtZmJkMmU1MWM1OTcx&cindex=2>.
BTW, I had looked at some Python doc that seems to be apart from the
reference above. So I'm not entirely remiss on this. I do look first.
However, on the other hand, regarding the reference, 29 pages is a bit
steep for any document.
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