22

Using Python I would like to find the date object for last Wednesday. I can figure out where today is on the calendar using isocalendar, and determine whether or not we need to go back a week to get to the previous Wednesday. However, I can't figure out how to create a new date object with that information. Essentially, I need to figure out how to create a date from an iso calendar tuple.

from datetime import date
today = date.today()
if today.isocalendar()[2] > 3: #day of week starting with Monday
    #get date for Wednesday of last week
else:
    #get date for Wednesday of this current week
2
  • Please say explicitly what to do if today is Wednesday. Is the ISO calendar relevant to your problem, or is it just an artifact of your attempted solution? Mar 5, 2010 at 2:50
  • 1
    Just an artifact. DisplacedAussie nailed it on the head.
    – roktechie
    Mar 5, 2010 at 13:20

4 Answers 4

60

I think you want this. If the specified day is a Wednesday it will give you that day.

from datetime import date
from datetime import timedelta
from calendar import WEDNESDAY

today = date.today()
offset = (today.weekday() - WEDNESDAY) % 7
last_wednesday = today - timedelta(days=offset)

Example, the last wednesday for every day in March:

for x in xrange(1, 32):
    today = date(year=2010, month=3, day=x)
    offset = (today.weekday() - WEDNESDAY) % 7
    last_wednesday = today - timedelta(days=offset)

    print last_wednesday
10

Assuming that "last Wednesday" can't be the same as "today", this shows how to do it for any day of the week:

>>> from datetime import date
>>> from datetime import timedelta
>>>
>>> MON, TUE, WED, THU, FRI, SAT, SUN = range(7)
>>>
>>> def lastWday(adate, w):
...     """Mon:w=0, Sun:w=6"""
...     delta = (adate.weekday() + 6 - w) % 7 + 1
...     return adate - timedelta(days=delta)
...
>>> for x in range(8, 16):
...     start = date(year=2010, month=3, day=x)
...     prev = lastWday(start, WED)
...     print start, start.weekday(), prev, prev.weekday()
...
2010-03-08 0 2010-03-03 2
2010-03-09 1 2010-03-03 2
2010-03-10 2 2010-03-03 2
2010-03-11 3 2010-03-10 2
2010-03-12 4 2010-03-10 2
2010-03-13 5 2010-03-10 2
2010-03-14 6 2010-03-10 2
2010-03-15 0 2010-03-10 2
1
  • This is very helpful. Usually if I am running a program on a Tuesday and I want to know what "last Tuesday" is, I don't mean "today". I mean the one that completed... which would be a week ago. This answer enabled me to eliminate an "if" statement in my code.
    – Mike S
    Jun 16, 2015 at 19:44
-1

read http://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html

Write your own function using date2 = date1 - timedelta(days=1) and date.isoweekday() iterating over previous days while isoweek is not equal to 3(Wednesday)

1
  • 3
    Awfully seems a bit harsh considering how few max comparisons, he asked for a function to get last wensday which probably won't get called that often(I do agree I threw something something together too fast. Mar 5, 2010 at 6:07
-1

I'm not sure if this meets your requirements, but it should get you the Wednesday closest to a given date the Wednesday in the same week as the given date, assuming weeks start on Monday:

import datetime

def find_closest_wednesday(date):
    WEDNESDAY = 3
    year, week, day  = date.isocalendar()
    delta = datetime.timedelta(days=WEDNESDAY-day)
    return date + delta

today = datetime.date.today()
print 'Today: ', today
print 'Closest Wendesday: ', find_closest_wednesday(today)

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