dateutil - powerful extensions to datetime ========================================== |pypi| |support| |licence| |gitter| |readthedocs| |travis| |appveyor| |pipelines| |coverage| .. |pypi| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/python-dateutil.svg?style=flat-square :target: https://pypi.org/project/python-dateutil/ :alt: pypi version .. |support| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/python-dateutil.svg?style=flat-square :target: https://pypi.org/project/python-dateutil/ :alt: supported Python version .. |travis| image:: https://img.shields.io/travis/dateutil/dateutil/master.svg?style=flat-square&label=Travis%20Build :target: https://travis-ci.org/dateutil/dateutil :alt: travis build status .. |appveyor| image:: https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/dateutil/dateutil/master.svg?style=flat-square&logo=appveyor :target: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/dateutil/dateutil :alt: appveyor build status .. |pipelines| image:: https://dev.azure.com/pythondateutilazure/dateutil/_apis/build/status/dateutil.dateutil?branchName=master :target: https://dev.azure.com/pythondateutilazure/dateutil/_build/latest?definitionId=1&branchName=master :alt: azure pipelines build status .. |coverage| image:: https://codecov.io/github/dateutil/dateutil/coverage.svg?branch=master :target: https://codecov.io/github/dateutil/dateutil?branch=master :alt: Code coverage .. |gitter| image:: https://badges.gitter.im/dateutil/dateutil.svg :alt: Join the chat at https://gitter.im/dateutil/dateutil :target: https://gitter.im/dateutil/dateutil .. |licence| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/python-dateutil.svg?style=flat-square :target: https://pypi.org/project/python-dateutil/ :alt: licence .. |readthedocs| image:: https://img.shields.io/readthedocs/dateutil/latest.svg?style=flat-square&label=Read%20the%20Docs :alt: Read the documentation at https://dateutil.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ :target: https://dateutil.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ The `dateutil` module provides powerful extensions to the standard `datetime` module, available in Python. Installation ============ `dateutil` can be installed from PyPI using `pip` (note that the package name is different from the importable name):: pip install python-dateutil Download ======== dateutil is available on PyPI https://pypi.org/project/python-dateutil/ The documentation is hosted at: https://dateutil.readthedocs.io/en/stable/ Code ==== The code and issue tracker are hosted on GitHub: https://github.com/dateutil/dateutil/ Features ======== * Computing of relative deltas (next month, next year, next Monday, last week of month, etc); * Computing of relative deltas between two given date and/or datetime objects; * Computing of dates based on very flexible recurrence rules, using a superset of the `iCalendar `_ specification. Parsing of RFC strings is supported as well. * Generic parsing of dates in almost any string format; * Timezone (tzinfo) implementations for tzfile(5) format files (/etc/localtime, /usr/share/zoneinfo, etc), TZ environment string (in all known formats), iCalendar format files, given ranges (with help from relative deltas), local machine timezone, fixed offset timezone, UTC timezone, and Windows registry-based time zones. * Internal up-to-date world timezone information based on Olson's database. * Computing of Easter Sunday dates for any given year, using Western, Orthodox or Julian algorithms; * A comprehensive test suite. Quick example ============= Here's a snapshot, just to give an idea about the power of the package. For more examples, look at the documentation. Suppose you want to know how much time is left, in years/months/days/etc, before the next easter happening on a year with a Friday 13th in August, and you want to get today's date out of the "date" unix system command. Here is the code: .. doctest:: readmeexample >>> from dateutil.relativedelta import * >>> from dateutil.easter import * >>> from dateutil.rrule import * >>> from dateutil.parser import * >>> from datetime import * >>> now = parse("Sat Oct 11 17:13:46 UTC 2003") >>> today = now.date() >>> year = rrule(YEARLY,dtstart=now,bymonth=8,bymonthday=13,byweekday=FR)[0].year >>> rdelta = relativedelta(easter(year), today) >>> print("Today is: %s" % today) Today is: 2003-10-11 >>> print("Year with next Aug 13th on a Friday is: %s" % year) Year with next Aug 13th on a Friday is: 2004 >>> print("How far is the Easter of that year: %s" % rdelta) How far is the Easter of that year: relativedelta(months=+6) >>> print("And the Easter of that year is: %s" % (today+rdelta)) And the Easter of that year is: 2004-04-11 Being exactly 6 months ahead was **really** a coincidence :) Contributing ============ We welcome many types of contributions - bug reports, pull requests (code, infrastructure or documentation fixes). For more information about how to contribute to the project, see the ``CONTRIBUTING.md`` file in the repository. Author ====== The dateutil module was written by Gustavo Niemeyer in 2003. It is maintained by: * Gustavo Niemeyer 2003-2011 * Tomi Pieviläinen 2012-2014 * Yaron de Leeuw 2014-2016 * Paul Ganssle 2015- Starting with version 2.4.1, all source and binary distributions will be signed by a PGP key that has, at the very least, been signed by the key which made the previous release. A table of release signing keys can be found below: =========== ============================ Releases Signing key fingerprint =========== ============================ 2.4.1- `6B49 ACBA DCF6 BD1C A206 67AB CD54 FCE3 D964 BEFB`_ (|pgp_mirror|_) =========== ============================ Contact ======= Our mailing list is available at `dateutil@python.org `_. As it is hosted by the PSF, it is subject to the `PSF code of conduct `_. License ======= All contributions after December 1, 2017 released under dual license - either `Apache 2.0 License `_ or the `BSD 3-Clause License `_. Contributions before December 1, 2017 - except those those explicitly relicensed - are released only under the BSD 3-Clause License. .. _6B49 ACBA DCF6 BD1C A206 67AB CD54 FCE3 D964 BEFB: https://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?op=vindex&search=0xCD54FCE3D964BEFB .. |pgp_mirror| replace:: mirror .. _pgp_mirror: https://sks-keyservers.net/pks/lookup?op=vindex&search=0xCD54FCE3D964BEFB