I am attempting to use argparse
to convert an argument into a timedelta
object. My program reads in strings supplied by the user and converts them to various datetime
objects for later usage. I cannot get the filter_length
argument to process correctly though. My code:
import datetime
import time
import argparse
def mkdate(datestring):
return datetime.datetime.strptime(datestring, '%Y-%m-%d').date()
def mktime(timestring):
return datetime.datetime.strptime(timestring, '%I:%M%p').time()
def mkdelta(deltatuple):
return datetime.timedelta(deltatuple)
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('start_date', type=mkdate, nargs=1)
parser.add_argument('start_time', type=mktime, nargs=1, )
parser.add_argument('filter_length', type=mkdelta, nargs=1, default=datetime.timedelta(1))#default filter length is 1 day.
I run the program, passing 1
as the timedelta
value (I only want it to be one day):
> python program.py 2012-09-16 11:00am 1
But I get the following error:
>>> program.py: error: argument filter_length: invalid mkdelta value: '1'
I don't understand why the value is invalid. If I call the mkdelta function on its own, like this:
mkdelta(1)
print mkdelta(1)
It returns:
datetime.timedelta(1)
1 day, 0:00:00
This is exactly the value that I'm looking for. Can someone help me figure out how to do this conversion properly using argparse
?