Thanks, yes, I guess the question is ... what date/time is it looking at ? and is it the same under various OSs ?
Philippe Jorge Godoy wrote: > Philippe Martin wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> I need to get the date and time under Windows and Linux but need the >> information visible to the user (cannot find my words) not the sytem >> information (ex: a PC setup on greenwich but the date/time displayed are >> relative to some other place. > > Something like this? > >>>> import datetime >>>> datetime.datetime.now() > datetime.datetime(2006, 4, 18, 16, 19, 42, 159000) >>>> print datetime.datetime.now() > 2006-04-18 16:19:45.245053 >>>> dir(datetime.datetime.now()) > ['__add__', '__class__', '__delattr__', '__doc__', '__eq__', '__ge__', > '__getattribute__', '__gt__', '__hash__', '__init__', '__le__', '__lt__', > '__ne__', '__new__', '__radd__', '__reduce__', '__reduce_ex__', > '__repr__', '__rsub__', '__setattr__', '__str__', '__sub__', 'astimezone', > 'combine', 'ctime', 'date', 'day', 'dst', 'fromordinal', 'fromtimestamp', > 'hour', 'isocalendar', 'isoformat', 'isoweekday', 'max', 'microsecond', > 'min', 'minute', 'month', 'now', 'replace', 'resolution', 'second', > 'strftime', 'time', 'timetuple', 'timetz', 'today', 'toordinal', 'tzinfo', > 'tzname', 'utcfromtimestamp', 'utcnow', 'utcoffset', 'utctimetuple', > 'weekday', 'year'] >>>> > > -- > Jorge Godoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > "Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur." > - Qualquer coisa dita em latim soa profundo. > - Anything said in Latin sounds smart. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list