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Code Editor : dates.txt
.. -*- mode: rst; encoding: utf-8 -*- =============== Date Formatting =============== .. contents:: Contents :depth: 2 .. sectnum:: When working with date and time information in Python, you commonly use the classes ``date``, ``datetime`` and/or ``time`` from the `datetime`_ package. Babel provides functions for locale-specific formatting of those objects in its ``dates`` module: .. _`datetime`: http://docs.python.org/lib/module-datetime.html .. code-block:: pycon >>> from datetime import date, datetime, time >>> from babel.dates import format_date, format_datetime, format_time >>> d = date(2007, 4, 1) >>> format_date(d, locale='en') u'Apr 1, 2007' >>> format_date(d, locale='de_DE') u'01.04.2007' As this example demonstrates, Babel will automatically choose a date format that is appropriate for the requested locale. The ``format_*()`` functions also accept an optional ``format`` argument, which allows you to choose between one of four format variations: * ``short``, * ``medium`` (the default), * ``long``, and * ``full``. For example: .. code-block:: pycon >>> format_date(d, format='short', locale='en') u'4/1/07' >>> format_date(d, format='long', locale='en') u'April 1, 2007' >>> format_date(d, format='full', locale='en') u'Sunday, April 1, 2007' Pattern Syntax ============== While Babel makes it simple to use the appropriate date/time format for a given locale, you can also force it to use custom patterns. Note that Babel uses different patterns for specifying number and date formats compared to the Python equivalents (such as ``time.strftime()``), which have mostly been inherited from C and POSIX. The patterns used in Babel are based on the `Locale Data Markup Language specification`_ (LDML), which defines them as follows: A date/time pattern is a string of characters, where specific strings of characters are replaced with date and time data from a calendar when formatting or used to generate data for a calendar when parsing. […] Characters may be used multiple times. For example, if ``y`` is used for the year, ``yy`` might produce "99", whereas ``yyyy`` produces "1999". For most numerical fields, the number of characters specifies the field width. For example, if ``h`` is the hour, ``h`` might produce "5", but ``hh`` produces "05". For some characters, the count specifies whether an abbreviated or full form should be used […] Two single quotes represent a literal single quote, either inside or outside single quotes. Text within single quotes is not interpreted in any way (except for two adjacent single quotes). For example: .. code-block:: pycon >>> d = date(2007, 4, 1) >>> format_date(d, "EEE, MMM d, ''yy", locale='en') u"Sun, Apr 1, '07" >>> format_date(d, "EEEE, d.M.yyyy", locale='de') u'Sonntag, 1.4.2007' >>> t = time(15, 30) >>> format_time(t, "hh 'o''clock' a", locale='en') u"03 o'clock PM" >>> format_time(t, 'H:mm a', locale='de') u'15:30 nachm.' >>> dt = datetime(2007, 4, 1, 15, 30) >>> format_datetime(dt, "yyyyy.MMMM.dd GGG hh:mm a", locale='en') u'02007.April.01 AD 03:30 PM' The syntax for custom datetime format patterns is described in detail in the the `Locale Data Markup Language specification`_. The following table is just a relatively brief overview. .. _`Locale Data Markup Language specification`: http://unicode.org/reports/tr35/#Date_Format_Patterns Date Fields ----------- +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Field | Symbol | Description | +==========+========+========================================================+ | Era | ``G`` | Replaced with the era string for the current date. One | | | | to three letters for the abbreviated form, four | | | | lettersfor the long form, five for the narrow form | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Year | ``y`` | Replaced by the year. Normally the length specifies | | | | the padding, but for two letters it also specifies the | | | | maximum length. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``Y`` | Same as ``y`` but uses the ISO year-week calendar. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``u`` | ?? | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Quarter | ``Q`` | Use one or two for the numerical quarter, three for | | | | the abbreviation, or four for the full name. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``q`` | Use one or two for the numerical quarter, three for | | | | the abbreviation, or four for the full name. | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Month | ``M`` | Use one or two for the numerical month, three for the | | | | abbreviation, or four for the full name, or five for | | | | the narrow name. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``L`` | Use one or two for the numerical month, three for the | | | | abbreviation, or four for the full name, or 5 for the | | | | narrow name. | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Week | ``w`` | Week of year. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``W`` | Week of month. | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Day | ``d`` | Day of month. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``D`` | Day of year. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``F`` | Day of week in month. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``g`` | ?? | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Week day | ``E`` | Day of week. Use one through three letters for the | | | | short day, or four for the full name, or five for the | | | | narrow name. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``e`` | Local day of week. Same as E except adds a numeric | | | | value that will depend on the local starting day of | | | | the week, using one or two letters. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``c`` | ?? | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ Time Fields ----------- +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Field | Symbol | Description | +==========+========+========================================================+ | Period | ``a`` | AM or PM | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Hour | ``h`` | Hour [1-12]. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``H`` | Hour [0-23]. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``K`` | Hour [0-11]. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``k`` | Hour [1-24]. | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Minute | ``m`` | Use one or two for zero places padding. | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Second | ``s`` | Use one or two for zero places padding. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``S`` | Fractional second, rounds to the count of letters. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``A`` | Milliseconds in day. | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | Timezone | ``z`` | Use one to three letters for the short timezone or | | | | four for the full name. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``Z`` | Use one to three letters for RFC 822, four letters for | | | | GMT format. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``v`` | Use one letter for short wall (generic) time, four for | | | | long wall time. | | +--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ | | ``V`` | Same as ``z``, except that timezone abbreviations | | | | should be used regardless of whether they are in | | | | common use by the locale. | +----------+--------+--------------------------------------------------------+ Time-zone Support ================= Many of the verbose time formats include the time-zone, but time-zone information is not by default available for the Python ``datetime`` and ``time`` objects. The standard library includes only the abstract ``tzinfo`` class, which you need appropriate implementations for to actually use in your application. Babel includes a ``tzinfo`` implementation for UTC (Universal Time). For real time-zone support, it is strongly recommended that you use the third-party package `pytz`_, which includes the definitions of practically all of the time-zones used on the world, as well as important functions for reliably converting from UTC to local time, and vice versa: .. code-block:: pycon >>> from datetime import time >>> from pytz import timezone, utc >>> dt = datetime(2007, 04, 01, 15, 30, tzinfo=utc) >>> eastern = timezone('US/Eastern') >>> format_datetime(dt, 'H:mm Z', tzinfo=eastern, locale='en_US') u'11:30 -0400' The recommended approach to deal with different time-zones in a Python application is to always use UTC internally, and only convert from/to the users time-zone when accepting user input and displaying date/time data, respectively. You can use Babel together with ``pytz`` to apply a time-zone to any ``datetime`` or ``time`` object for display, leaving the original information unchanged: .. code-block:: pycon >>> british = timezone('Europe/London') >>> format_datetime(dt, 'H:mm zzzz', tzinfo=british, locale='en_US') u'16:30 British Summer Time' Here, the given UTC time is adjusted to the "Europe/London" time-zone, and daylight savings time is taken into account. Daylight savings time is also applied to ``format_time``, but because the actual date is unknown in that case, the current day is assumed to determine whether DST or standard time should be used. .. _`pytz`: http://pytz.sourceforge.net/ Localized Time-zone Names ------------------------- While the ``Locale`` class provides access to various locale display names related to time-zones, the process of building a localized name of a time-zone is actually quite complicated. Babel implements it in separately usable functions in the ``babel.dates`` module, most importantly the ``get_timezone_name`` function: .. code-block:: pycon >>> from pytz import timezone >>> from babel import Locale >>> from babel.dates import get_timezone_name >>> tz = timezone('Europe/Berlin') >>> get_timezone_name(tz, locale=Locale.parse('pt_PT')) u'Hor\xe1rio Alemanha' You can pass the function either a ``datetime.tzinfo`` object, or a ``datetime.date`` or ``datetime.datetime`` object. If you pass an actual date, the function will be able to take daylight savings time into account. If you pass just the time-zone, Babel does not know whether daylight savings time is in effect, so it uses a generic representation, which is useful for example to display a list of time-zones to the user. .. code-block:: pycon >>> from datetime import datetime >>> dt = tz.localize(datetime(2007, 8, 15)) >>> get_timezone_name(dt, locale=Locale.parse('de_DE')) u'Mitteleurop\xe4ische Sommerzeit' >>> get_timezone_name(tz, locale=Locale.parse('de_DE')) u'Deutschland' Parsing Dates ============= Babel can also parse date and time information in a locale-sensitive manner: .. code-block:: pycon >>> from babel.dates import parse_date, parse_datetime, parse_time .. note:: Date/time parsing is not properly implemented yet
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