Your problem is that datetime.datetime does not accept a tuple as an
argument. It expects an integer value for the first argument, but you
supplied a tuple. In Python, you can use a sequence (e.g., tuple or
list) the way you want by prefixing it with an asterisk. This causes
the sequence of items to be treated as individual arguments. So:
Startt = datetime.datetime(2022, 12, 13, 5, 3, 30)
st1 = (2022, 12, 13, 5, 3, 30)
dts1 = datetime.datetime(*st1) # NOT datetime.datetime(st1)
dts1 == Startt # True
On 12/13/2022 10:43 PM, Gronicus@SGA.Ninja wrote:
As is, Test A works.
Comment out Test A and uncomment Test B it fails.
In Test B, I move the data into a variable resulting with the report:
"TypeError: an integer is required (got type tuple)
How do I fix this?
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import datetime
#=================================================
# Test A Hard coded Date/Time
Startt = datetime.datetime(2022, 12, 13, 5, 3, 30)
Stopp = datetime.datetime(2022, 12, 12, 21, 15, 30)
# =================================================
# Test B Date/Time data as a variable
#Startt = (2022, 12, 13, 5, 3, 30)
#Stopp = (2022, 12, 12, 21, 15, 30)
#Startt = datetime.datetime(Startt)
#Stopp = datetime.datetime(Stopp)
# =================================================
c = Startt - Stopp
minutes = c.total_seconds() / 60
minutes = c.seconds / 60
hours = 0
while (minutes > 59):
minutes = minutes - 60
hours += 1
minutes = round(minutes)
print()
print (" Hours = <" + str(hours) + ">")
print (" Minutes = <" + str(minutes) + ">")
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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