On Fri, 21 Nov 2014 10:20:06 +0000, Mark Lawrence <breamore...@yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
>On 21/11/2014 08:50, Gary Herron wrote: >> On 11/21/2014 12:35 AM, Steve Hayes wrote: >>> I've finally found a use for Python. >>> >>> When, in the course of my genealogy research, I look at census or burial >>> records, I often want to work out a person's date of birth from their >>> age. >>> It's a simple matter of mental arithmetic, but I sometimes get it >>> wrong, and >>> mislead myself. There are calculators and date calculation programs, >>> but they >>> are usually too complicated and try to do too much, so by the time you've >>> worked out what to do it takes much longer. >>> >>> This Python script does it for me. >>> >>> year = input("Year: ") >>> age = input("Age: ") >>> born = year-age >>> print 'Year of birth:', born >>> >>> It's so simple, so elementary, that it's not really worth writing about, >>> except for the fact that it illustrates the KISS principle. >>> >>> It is sometimes better to have a simple program that does one thing >>> well than >>> a complex one that does lots of things, but none of them very >>> efficiently. >>> >>> The average hand calculator can do the same job, but you have to pick >>> it up >>> and put it down, and you can't easily see if you've made a typo. >>> >>> Having said that, however, yes, I would perhaps like to use Python for >>> more >>> complicated date processing routines, namely to convert the kinds of >>> dates >>> produced by genealogy programs to a simple yyyy-mm-dd that computer >>> database >>> programs can understand, so that "Abt May 1677" would be rendered as >>> "1677-05-00" >>> >>> Has anyone done something like that in Python? >>> >>> >>> >> >> The datetime module has lots of capabilities including the several you >> mention. >> >> See https://docs.python.org/2/library/datetime.html >> >> Gary Herron >> > >As we're now firmly heading into the Python 3 era would people please be >kind enough to use the Python 3 links. I know it's only a single >character change but it's the principle to me. TIA. As I'm using Python 2 and I asked the question, I'm grateful that the answer was given in my dialect. -- Steve Hayes from Tshwane, South Africa Web: http://www.khanya.org.za/stevesig.htm Blog: http://khanya.wordpress.com E-mail - see web page, or parse: shayes at dunelm full stop org full stop uk -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list