Τη Κυριακή, 16 Σεπτεμβρίου 2012 4:23:02 μ.μ. UTC+3, ο χρήστης Günther Dietrich έγραψε: > In article <cdf072b2-7359-4417-b1e4-d984e4317...@googlegroups.com>, > > Νικόλαος Κούρας <nikos.gr...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > [...] > > > > >also it would be nice if datetime.datetime.now(GMT+2) can be used. > > > > In <news:mailman.774.1347735926.27098.python-l...@python.org>, one of > > the first answers to your question you were pointed to pytz. This module > > does exactly what you ask for: > > > > >>> import datetime > > >>> import pytz > > >>> greek_date = datetime.datetime.now(pytz.timezone('Europe/Athens')) > > >>> greek_date > > >>> print(greek_date) > > > > If you do a help(pytz), obviously after having imported pytz, you will > > get some information about the module. At the end of this help, there > > are some attributes listed. One of them is all_timezones. Guess what it > > contains? > > > > > > > > Best regards, > > > > Günther > > > > > > > > > > PS: I didn't know pytz yet. But it took me just five minutes of reading > > the datetime documentation and trying pytz.timezone(), to get a working > > example. > > So I don't understand, why you didn't follow the proposal of trying > > pytz, but claimed, it wouldn't work. > > Can you explain, why ist doesn't work for you rsp. what is the error > > when it doesn't work?
import pytz fails in my webhost unfortunately :( This module is not supported by hostgator. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list