> I have a table with a column of type date, with dates and time combined (like > '1/6/2013 3:52:69PM'), that spans many months. How would I pull out records > that are the first and last entries per day?
You mentioned "table" and "column", which leads me to think you are dealing with data in a SQL database. If so, that would likely change the problem solution significantly. If you have something like lists of string data in Python though, you might want to make sure your timestamps are in a normalized form first, so you can accurately sort by the timestamps. For that, my weapon of choice is the dateutil package, and in particular, the dateutil.parser module: >>> x = dateutil.parser.parse("1/6/2013 3:52:59PM") >>> x datetime.datetime(2013, 1, 6, 15, 52, 59) >>> print x 2013-01-06 15:52:59 Once your timestamps are represented as Python datetime objects, the problem gets a bit easier, especially if you want to find the beginning and ending timestamps of a bunch of dates. Sort, then throw some itertools.groupby pixie dust at it. My ancient, reptilian brain has never quite grokked all that iterator stuff, so I won't hazard a guess how to spell the exact solution. Skip -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list