Date and Time

The date and time functionality provided by Babel lets you format standard Python datetime, date and time objects and work with timezones.

Date and Time Formatting

babel.dates.format_datetime(datetime=None, format='medium', tzinfo=None, locale=default_locale('LC_TIME'))

Return a date formatted according to the given pattern.

>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> dt = datetime(2007, 4, 1, 15, 30)
>>> format_datetime(dt, locale='en_US')
u'Apr 1, 2007, 3:30:00\u202fPM'

For any pattern requiring the display of the timezone:

>>> format_datetime(dt, 'full', tzinfo=get_timezone('Europe/Paris'),
...                 locale='fr_FR')
'dimanche 1 avril 2007, 17:30:00 heure d’été d’Europe centrale'
>>> format_datetime(dt, "yyyy.MM.dd G 'at' HH:mm:ss zzz",
...                 tzinfo=get_timezone('US/Eastern'), locale='en')
u'2007.04.01 AD at 11:30:00 EDT'
Parameters:
  • datetime – the datetime object; if None, the current date and time is used

  • format – one of “full”, “long”, “medium”, or “short”, or a custom date/time pattern

  • tzinfo – the timezone to apply to the time for display

  • locale – a Locale object or a locale identifier

babel.dates.format_date(date=None, format='medium', locale=default_locale('LC_TIME'))

Return a date formatted according to the given pattern.

>>> from datetime import date
>>> d = date(2007, 4, 1)
>>> format_date(d, locale='en_US')
u'Apr 1, 2007'
>>> format_date(d, format='full', locale='de_DE')
u'Sonntag, 1. April 2007'

If you don’t want to use the locale default formats, you can specify a custom date pattern:

>>> format_date(d, "EEE, MMM d, ''yy", locale='en')
u"Sun, Apr 1, '07"
Parameters:
  • date – the date or datetime object; if None, the current date is used

  • format – one of “full”, “long”, “medium”, or “short”, or a custom date/time pattern

  • locale – a Locale object or a locale identifier

babel.dates.format_time(time=None, format='medium', tzinfo=None, locale=default_locale('LC_TIME'))

Return a time formatted according to the given pattern.

>>> from datetime import datetime, time
>>> t = time(15, 30)
>>> format_time(t, locale='en_US')
u'3:30:00\u202fPM'
>>> format_time(t, format='short', locale='de_DE')
u'15:30'

If you don’t want to use the locale default formats, you can specify a custom time pattern:

>>> format_time(t, "hh 'o''clock' a", locale='en')
u"03 o'clock PM"

For any pattern requiring the display of the time-zone a timezone has to be specified explicitly:

>>> t = datetime(2007, 4, 1, 15, 30)
>>> tzinfo = get_timezone('Europe/Paris')
>>> t = _localize(tzinfo, t)
>>> format_time(t, format='full', tzinfo=tzinfo, locale='fr_FR')
'15:30:00 heure d’été d’Europe centrale'
>>> format_time(t, "hh 'o''clock' a, zzzz", tzinfo=get_timezone('US/Eastern'),
...             locale='en')
u"09 o'clock AM, Eastern Daylight Time"

As that example shows, when this function gets passed a datetime.datetime value, the actual time in the formatted string is adjusted to the timezone specified by the tzinfo parameter. If the datetime is “naive” (i.e. it has no associated timezone information), it is assumed to be in UTC.

These timezone calculations are not performed if the value is of type datetime.time, as without date information there’s no way to determine what a given time would translate to in a different timezone without information about whether daylight savings time is in effect or not. This means that time values are left as-is, and the value of the tzinfo parameter is only used to display the timezone name if needed:

>>> t = time(15, 30)
>>> format_time(t, format='full', tzinfo=get_timezone('Europe/Paris'),
...             locale='fr_FR')  
u'15:30:00 heure normale d\u2019Europe centrale'
>>> format_time(t, format='full', tzinfo=get_timezone('US/Eastern'),
...             locale='en_US')  
u'3:30:00\u202fPM Eastern Standard Time'
Parameters:
  • time – the time or datetime object; if None, the current time in UTC is used

  • format – one of “full”, “long”, “medium”, or “short”, or a custom date/time pattern

  • tzinfo – the time-zone to apply to the time for display

  • locale – a Locale object or a locale identifier

babel.dates.format_timedelta(delta, granularity='second', threshold=.85, add_direction=False, format='long', locale=default_locale('LC_TIME'))

Return a time delta according to the rules of the given locale.

>>> from datetime import timedelta
>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(weeks=12), locale='en_US')
u'3 months'
>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(seconds=1), locale='es')
u'1 segundo'

The granularity parameter can be provided to alter the lowest unit presented, which defaults to a second.

>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(hours=3), granularity='day', locale='en_US')
u'1 day'

The threshold parameter can be used to determine at which value the presentation switches to the next higher unit. A higher threshold factor means the presentation will switch later. For example:

>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(hours=23), threshold=0.9, locale='en_US')
u'1 day'
>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(hours=23), threshold=1.1, locale='en_US')
u'23 hours'

In addition directional information can be provided that informs the user if the date is in the past or in the future:

>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(hours=1), add_direction=True, locale='en')
u'in 1 hour'
>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(hours=-1), add_direction=True, locale='en')
u'1 hour ago'

The format parameter controls how compact or wide the presentation is:

>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(hours=3), format='short', locale='en')
u'3 hr'
>>> format_timedelta(timedelta(hours=3), format='narrow', locale='en')
u'3h'
Parameters:
  • delta – a timedelta object representing the time difference to format, or the delta in seconds as an int value

  • granularity – determines the smallest unit that should be displayed, the value can be one of “year”, “month”, “week”, “day”, “hour”, “minute” or “second”

  • threshold – factor that determines at which point the presentation switches to the next higher unit

  • add_direction – if this flag is set to True the return value will include directional information. For instance a positive timedelta will include the information about it being in the future, a negative will be information about the value being in the past.

  • format – the format, can be “narrow”, “short” or “long”. ( “medium” is deprecated, currently converted to “long” to maintain compatibility)

  • locale – a Locale object or a locale identifier

babel.dates.format_skeleton(skeleton, datetime=None, tzinfo=None, fuzzy=True, locale=default_locale('LC_TIME'))

Return a time and/or date formatted according to the given pattern.

The skeletons are defined in the CLDR data and provide more flexibility than the simple short/long/medium formats, but are a bit harder to use. The are defined using the date/time symbols without order or punctuation and map to a suitable format for the given locale.

>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> t = datetime(2007, 4, 1, 15, 30)
>>> format_skeleton('MMMEd', t, locale='fr')
u'dim. 1 avr.'
>>> format_skeleton('MMMEd', t, locale='en')
u'Sun, Apr 1'
>>> format_skeleton('yMMd', t, locale='fi')  # yMMd is not in the Finnish locale; yMd gets used
u'1.4.2007'
>>> format_skeleton('yMMd', t, fuzzy=False, locale='fi')  # yMMd is not in the Finnish locale, an error is thrown
Traceback (most recent call last):
    ...
KeyError: yMMd

After the skeleton is resolved to a pattern format_datetime is called so all timezone processing etc is the same as for that.

Parameters:
  • skeleton – A date time skeleton as defined in the cldr data.

  • datetime – the time or datetime object; if None, the current time in UTC is used

  • tzinfo – the time-zone to apply to the time for display

  • fuzzy – If the skeleton is not found, allow choosing a skeleton that’s close enough to it.

  • locale – a Locale object or a locale identifier

babel.dates.format_interval(start, end, skeleton=None, tzinfo=None, fuzzy=True, locale=default_locale('LC_TIME'))

Format an interval between two instants according to the locale’s rules.

>>> from datetime import date, time
>>> format_interval(date(2016, 1, 15), date(2016, 1, 17), "yMd", locale="fi")
u'15.–17.1.2016'
>>> format_interval(time(12, 12), time(16, 16), "Hm", locale="en_GB")
'12:12–16:16'
>>> format_interval(time(5, 12), time(16, 16), "hm", locale="en_US")
'5:12 AM – 4:16 PM'
>>> format_interval(time(16, 18), time(16, 24), "Hm", locale="it")
'16:18–16:24'

If the start instant equals the end instant, the interval is formatted like the instant.

>>> format_interval(time(16, 18), time(16, 18), "Hm", locale="it")
'16:18'

Unknown skeletons fall back to “default” formatting.

>>> format_interval(date(2015, 1, 1), date(2017, 1, 1), "wzq", locale="ja")
'2015/01/01~2017/01/01'
>>> format_interval(time(16, 18), time(16, 24), "xxx", locale="ja")
'16:18:00~16:24:00'
>>> format_interval(date(2016, 1, 15), date(2016, 1, 17), "xxx", locale="de")
'15.01.2016 – 17.01.2016'
Parameters:
  • start – First instant (datetime/date/time)

  • end – Second instant (datetime/date/time)

  • skeleton – The “skeleton format” to use for formatting.

  • tzinfo – tzinfo to use (if none is already attached)

  • fuzzy – If the skeleton is not found, allow choosing a skeleton that’s close enough to it.

  • locale – A locale object or identifier.

Returns:

Formatted interval

Timezone Functionality

babel.dates.get_timezone(zone: str | datetime.tzinfo | None = None) tzinfo

Looks up a timezone by name and returns it. The timezone object returned comes from pytz or zoneinfo, whichever is available. It corresponds to the tzinfo interface and can be used with all of the functions of Babel that operate with dates.

If a timezone is not known a LookupError is raised. If zone is None a local zone object is returned.

Parameters:

zone – the name of the timezone to look up. If a timezone object itself is passed in, it’s returned unchanged.

babel.dates.get_timezone_gmt(datetime: _Instant = None, width: Literal['long', 'short', 'iso8601', 'iso8601_short'] = 'long', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX', return_z: bool = False) str

Return the timezone associated with the given datetime object formatted as string indicating the offset from GMT.

>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> dt = datetime(2007, 4, 1, 15, 30)
>>> get_timezone_gmt(dt, locale='en')
u'GMT+00:00'
>>> get_timezone_gmt(dt, locale='en', return_z=True)
'Z'
>>> get_timezone_gmt(dt, locale='en', width='iso8601_short')
u'+00'
>>> tz = get_timezone('America/Los_Angeles')
>>> dt = _localize(tz, datetime(2007, 4, 1, 15, 30))
>>> get_timezone_gmt(dt, locale='en')
u'GMT-07:00'
>>> get_timezone_gmt(dt, 'short', locale='en')
u'-0700'
>>> get_timezone_gmt(dt, locale='en', width='iso8601_short')
u'-07'

The long format depends on the locale, for example in France the acronym UTC string is used instead of GMT:

>>> get_timezone_gmt(dt, 'long', locale='fr_FR')
u'UTC-07:00'

New in version 0.9.

Parameters:
  • datetime – the datetime object; if None, the current date and time in UTC is used

  • width – either “long” or “short” or “iso8601” or “iso8601_short”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

  • return_z – True or False; Function returns indicator “Z” when local time offset is 0

babel.dates.get_timezone_location(dt_or_tzinfo: _DtOrTzinfo = None, locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX', return_city: bool = False) str

Return a representation of the given timezone using “location format”.

The result depends on both the local display name of the country and the city associated with the time zone:

>>> tz = get_timezone('America/St_Johns')
>>> print(get_timezone_location(tz, locale='de_DE'))
Kanada (St. John’s) (Ortszeit)
>>> print(get_timezone_location(tz, locale='en'))
Canada (St. John’s) Time
>>> print(get_timezone_location(tz, locale='en', return_city=True))
St. John’s
>>> tz = get_timezone('America/Mexico_City')
>>> get_timezone_location(tz, locale='de_DE')
u'Mexiko (Mexiko-Stadt) (Ortszeit)'

If the timezone is associated with a country that uses only a single timezone, just the localized country name is returned:

>>> tz = get_timezone('Europe/Berlin')
>>> get_timezone_name(tz, locale='de_DE')
u'Mitteleurop\xe4ische Zeit'

New in version 0.9.

Parameters:
  • dt_or_tzinfo – the datetime or tzinfo object that determines the timezone; if None, the current date and time in UTC is assumed

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

  • return_city – True or False, if True then return exemplar city (location) for the time zone

Returns:

the localized timezone name using location format

babel.dates.get_timezone_name(dt_or_tzinfo: _DtOrTzinfo = None, width: Literal['long', 'short'] = 'long', uncommon: bool = False, locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX', zone_variant: Literal['generic', 'daylight', 'standard'] | None = None, return_zone: bool = False) str

Return the localized display name for the given timezone. The timezone may be specified using a datetime or tzinfo object.

>>> from datetime import time
>>> dt = time(15, 30, tzinfo=get_timezone('America/Los_Angeles'))
>>> get_timezone_name(dt, locale='en_US')  
u'Pacific Standard Time'
>>> get_timezone_name(dt, locale='en_US', return_zone=True)
'America/Los_Angeles'
>>> get_timezone_name(dt, width='short', locale='en_US')  
u'PST'

If this function gets passed only a tzinfo object and no concrete datetime, the returned display name is independent of daylight savings time. This can be used for example for selecting timezones, or to set the time of events that recur across DST changes:

>>> tz = get_timezone('America/Los_Angeles')
>>> get_timezone_name(tz, locale='en_US')
u'Pacific Time'
>>> get_timezone_name(tz, 'short', locale='en_US')
u'PT'

If no localized display name for the timezone is available, and the timezone is associated with a country that uses only a single timezone, the name of that country is returned, formatted according to the locale:

>>> tz = get_timezone('Europe/Berlin')
>>> get_timezone_name(tz, locale='de_DE')
u'Mitteleurop\xe4ische Zeit'
>>> get_timezone_name(tz, locale='pt_BR')
u'Hor\xe1rio da Europa Central'

On the other hand, if the country uses multiple timezones, the city is also included in the representation:

>>> tz = get_timezone('America/St_Johns')
>>> get_timezone_name(tz, locale='de_DE')
u'Neufundland-Zeit'

Note that short format is currently not supported for all timezones and all locales. This is partially because not every timezone has a short code in every locale. In that case it currently falls back to the long format.

For more information see LDML Appendix J: Time Zone Display Names

New in version 0.9.

Changed in version 1.0: Added zone_variant support.

Parameters:
  • dt_or_tzinfo – the datetime or tzinfo object that determines the timezone; if a tzinfo object is used, the resulting display name will be generic, i.e. independent of daylight savings time; if None, the current date in UTC is assumed

  • width – either “long” or “short”

  • uncommon – deprecated and ignored

  • zone_variant – defines the zone variation to return. By default the variation is defined from the datetime object passed in. If no datetime object is passed in, the 'generic' variation is assumed. The following values are valid: 'generic', 'daylight' and 'standard'.

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

  • return_zone – True or False. If true then function returns long time zone ID

babel.dates.UTC

A timezone object for UTC.

babel.dates.LOCALTZ

A timezone object for the computer’s local timezone.

Data Access

babel.dates.get_period_names(width: Literal['abbreviated', 'narrow', 'wide'] = 'wide', context: _Context = 'stand-alone', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX') LocaleDataDict

Return the names for day periods (AM/PM) used by the locale.

>>> get_period_names(locale='en_US')['am']
u'AM'
Parameters:
  • width – the width to use, one of “abbreviated”, “narrow”, or “wide”

  • context – the context, either “format” or “stand-alone”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

babel.dates.get_day_names(width: Literal['abbreviated', 'narrow', 'short', 'wide'] = 'wide', context: _Context = 'format', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX') LocaleDataDict

Return the day names used by the locale for the specified format.

>>> get_day_names('wide', locale='en_US')[1]
u'Tuesday'
>>> get_day_names('short', locale='en_US')[1]
u'Tu'
>>> get_day_names('abbreviated', locale='es')[1]
u'mar'
>>> get_day_names('narrow', context='stand-alone', locale='de_DE')[1]
u'D'
Parameters:
  • width – the width to use, one of “wide”, “abbreviated”, “short” or “narrow”

  • context – the context, either “format” or “stand-alone”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

babel.dates.get_month_names(width: Literal['abbreviated', 'narrow', 'wide'] = 'wide', context: _Context = 'format', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX') LocaleDataDict

Return the month names used by the locale for the specified format.

>>> get_month_names('wide', locale='en_US')[1]
u'January'
>>> get_month_names('abbreviated', locale='es')[1]
u'ene'
>>> get_month_names('narrow', context='stand-alone', locale='de_DE')[1]
u'J'
Parameters:
  • width – the width to use, one of “wide”, “abbreviated”, or “narrow”

  • context – the context, either “format” or “stand-alone”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

babel.dates.get_quarter_names(width: Literal['abbreviated', 'narrow', 'wide'] = 'wide', context: _Context = 'format', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX') LocaleDataDict

Return the quarter names used by the locale for the specified format.

>>> get_quarter_names('wide', locale='en_US')[1]
u'1st quarter'
>>> get_quarter_names('abbreviated', locale='de_DE')[1]
u'Q1'
>>> get_quarter_names('narrow', locale='de_DE')[1]
u'1'
Parameters:
  • width – the width to use, one of “wide”, “abbreviated”, or “narrow”

  • context – the context, either “format” or “stand-alone”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

babel.dates.get_era_names(width: Literal['abbreviated', 'narrow', 'wide'] = 'wide', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX') LocaleDataDict

Return the era names used by the locale for the specified format.

>>> get_era_names('wide', locale='en_US')[1]
u'Anno Domini'
>>> get_era_names('abbreviated', locale='de_DE')[1]
u'n. Chr.'
Parameters:
  • width – the width to use, either “wide”, “abbreviated”, or “narrow”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

babel.dates.get_date_format(format: _PredefinedTimeFormat = 'medium', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX') DateTimePattern

Return the date formatting patterns used by the locale for the specified format.

>>> get_date_format(locale='en_US')
<DateTimePattern u'MMM d, y'>
>>> get_date_format('full', locale='de_DE')
<DateTimePattern u'EEEE, d. MMMM y'>
Parameters:
  • format – the format to use, one of “full”, “long”, “medium”, or “short”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

babel.dates.get_datetime_format(format: _PredefinedTimeFormat = 'medium', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX') DateTimePattern

Return the datetime formatting patterns used by the locale for the specified format.

>>> get_datetime_format(locale='en_US')
u'{1}, {0}'
Parameters:
  • format – the format to use, one of “full”, “long”, “medium”, or “short”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

babel.dates.get_time_format(format: _PredefinedTimeFormat = 'medium', locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX') DateTimePattern

Return the time formatting patterns used by the locale for the specified format.

>>> get_time_format(locale='en_US')
<DateTimePattern u'h:mm:ss a'>
>>> get_time_format('full', locale='de_DE')
<DateTimePattern u'HH:mm:ss zzzz'>
Parameters:
  • format – the format to use, one of “full”, “long”, “medium”, or “short”

  • locale – the Locale object, or a locale string

Basic Parsing

babel.dates.parse_date(string: str, locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX', format: _PredefinedTimeFormat = 'medium') datetime.date

Parse a date from a string.

This function first tries to interpret the string as ISO-8601 date format, then uses the date format for the locale as a hint to determine the order in which the date fields appear in the string.

>>> parse_date('4/1/04', locale='en_US')
datetime.date(2004, 4, 1)
>>> parse_date('01.04.2004', locale='de_DE')
datetime.date(2004, 4, 1)
>>> parse_date('2004-04-01', locale='en_US')
datetime.date(2004, 4, 1)
>>> parse_date('2004-04-01', locale='de_DE')
datetime.date(2004, 4, 1)
Parameters:
  • string – the string containing the date

  • locale – a Locale object or a locale identifier

  • format – the format to use (see get_date_format)

babel.dates.parse_time(string: str, locale: Locale | str | None = 'en_US_POSIX', format: _PredefinedTimeFormat = 'medium') datetime.time

Parse a time from a string.

This function uses the time format for the locale as a hint to determine the order in which the time fields appear in the string.

>>> parse_time('15:30:00', locale='en_US')
datetime.time(15, 30)
Parameters:
  • string – the string containing the time

  • locale – a Locale object or a locale identifier

  • format – the format to use (see get_time_format)

Returns:

the parsed time

Return type:

time

babel.dates.parse_pattern(pattern: str | babel.dates.DateTimePattern) DateTimePattern

Parse date, time, and datetime format patterns.

>>> parse_pattern("MMMMd").format
u'%(MMMM)s%(d)s'
>>> parse_pattern("MMM d, yyyy").format
u'%(MMM)s %(d)s, %(yyyy)s'

Pattern can contain literal strings in single quotes:

>>> parse_pattern("H:mm' Uhr 'z").format
u'%(H)s:%(mm)s Uhr %(z)s'

An actual single quote can be used by using two adjacent single quote characters:

>>> parse_pattern("hh' o''clock'").format
u"%(hh)s o'clock"
Parameters:

pattern – the formatting pattern to parse