On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 3:45 AM, Washington Ratso <jobhunt...@aol.com> wrote: > I am running Python 2.7 and would like to be able to calculate to the second > the time difference between now and some future date/time in the same > timezone while taking into account daylight savings time. I do not have > pytz. Any ideas how to do it? > > If it requires having pytz, how would I do it with pytz? > > Thank you. > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
It requires having pytz, or dateutil, in order to get timezone objects*. You can also create those objects yourself, but that’s tricky — and you SHOULD NOT do time zones on your own and just use something else. Why? See [0]. Example with pytz: # Necessary imports import pytz from datetime import datetime # the timezone in this example is Europe/Warsaw — use your favorite one tz = pytz.timezone('Europe/Warsaw') now = datetime.now(tz) # Note I’m not using the tzinfo= argument of datetime(), it’s flaky and seemingly uses a historic WMT (+01:24) timezone that is dead since 1915. future = tz.localize(datetime(2014, 12, 24)) # And now you can happily do: delta = future - now # and you will get the usual timedelta object, which you can use the usual way. ### * pytz ships the Olson tz database, while dateutil maps uses your system’s copy of the tz database (if you are on Linux, OS X or anything else that is not Windows, really) or maps to the Windows registry. Use whichever suits you. [0]: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5wpm-gesOY -- Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick <http://kwpolska.tk> PGP: 5EAAEA16 stop html mail | always bottom-post | only UTF-8 makes sense -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list