Mark,
On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 1:45 PM, Mark Lawrence <breamore...@yahoo.co.uk>wrote: > On 04/03/2014 21:38, MRAB wrote: > >> On 2014-03-04 20:57, Igor Korot wrote: >> >>> Hi, ALL, >>> I'm getting this: >>> >>> timestamp out of range for platform localtime()/gmtime() function >>> >>> trying to convert the timestamp with milliseconds into the datetime >>> object. >>> >>> The first hit of Google gives me this: >>> >>> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12458595/convert- >>> epoch-timestamp-in-python >>> >>> >>> but the solution described is not good for me since it does not gives >>> me the milliseconds value. >>> >>> How do I get the proper datetime value including milliseconds from the >>> timestamp? >>> >>> Thank you. >>> >>> Are you using Python 2? If yes, then try dividing by 1000.0. >> >> > You learn something new every day, I wasn't aware that you could multiply > or divide timestamps. Of course you can. Its just the number. And this is exactly what happens on the stackoverflow question I referenced in the OP. Problem is I want the milliseconds in the datetime object. Thank you. > > > -- > My fellow Pythonistas, ask not what our language can do for you, ask what > you can do for our language. > > Mark Lawrence > > --- > This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus > protection is active. > http://www.avast.com > > > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >
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