The Python 2 strptime()
function indeed does not support the %z
format for timezones (because the underlying time.strptime()
function doesn't support it). You have two options:
Ignore the timezone when parsing with strptime
:
time_obj = datetime.datetime.strptime(time_str[:19], '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S')
use the dateutil
module, it's parse function does deal with timezones:
from dateutil.parser import parse
time_obj = parse(time_str)
Quick demo on the command prompt:
>>> from dateutil.parser import parse
>>> parse("2012-07-24T23:14:29-07:00")
datetime.datetime(2012, 7, 24, 23, 14, 29, tzinfo=tzoffset(None, -25200))
You could also upgrade to Python 3.2 or newer, where timezone support has been improved to the point that %z
would work, provided you remove the last :
from the input, and the -
from before the %z
:
>>> import datetime
>>> time_str = "2012-07-24T23:14:29-07:00"
>>> datetime.datetime.strptime(time_str, '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/Users/mj/Development/Library/buildout.python/parts/opt/lib/python3.4/_strptime.py", line 500, in _strptime_datetime
tt, fraction = _strptime(data_string, format)
File "/Users/mj/Development/Library/buildout.python/parts/opt/lib/python3.4/_strptime.py", line 337, in _strptime
(data_string, format))
ValueError: time data '2012-07-24T23:14:29-07:00' does not match format '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z'
>>> ''.join(time_str.rsplit(':', 1))
'2012-07-24T23:14:29-0700'
>>> datetime.datetime.strptime(''.join(time_str.rsplit(':', 1)), '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z')
datetime.datetime(2012, 7, 24, 23, 14, 29, tzinfo=datetime.timezone(datetime.timedelta(-1, 61200)))
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…