88

I came across an interesting situation when using this class:

class Company(models.Model):
    date = models.DateField()
    time = models.TimeField()
c = Company(date=datetime.datetime.now(), time=datetime.datetime.now()) 

Django decides to use DATETIME_INPUT_FORMATS defined within the formats.py file. Which makes sense, because I am passing in a datetime.now() to both fields.

I think I could make Django to use DATE_INPUT_FORMATS and TIME_INPUT_FORMATS respectively, if I passed in only the current date and current time in.

Something like this:

c = Company(date=datetime.date.now(), time=datetime.time.now()) 

But this obviously throws an exception as now doesn't exist like that. Is there a different way to achieve this?

6 Answers 6

162

For the date, you can use datetime.date.today() or datetime.datetime.now().date().

For the time, you can use datetime.datetime.now().time().


However, why have separate fields for these in the first place? Why not use a single DateTimeField?

You can always define helper functions on the model that return the .date() or .time() later if you only want one or the other.

3
  • It works Amber many thanks. :) Can accept in 5 min. The reason I need it this way is because of internationalization and getting American time and date formats translated to the rest of the worlds. :)
    – Houman
    Aug 19, 2012 at 21:44
  • 5
    For timezone support, I think it's still better to use a DateTimeField to always store the UTC datetime and then transpose the date to the current timezone at query time.
    – Joucks
    Aug 19, 2012 at 21:47
  • @Kave Yeah, what piouk said. Use a DateTimeField that stores UTC and only translate to the relevant timezone (using something like pytz) when you go to display the time. Not only is this a better way of storage, but you also get timezone handling for free because pytz was already written for you.
    – Amber
    Aug 19, 2012 at 21:52
68
import datetime
datetime.datetime.now().strftime ("%Y%m%d")
20151015

For the time

from time import gmtime, strftime
showtime = strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", gmtime())
print showtime
2015-10-15 07:49:18
34
import datetime

datetime.date.today()  # Returns 2018-01-15

datetime.datetime.now() # Returns 2018-01-15 09:00
1
  • 2
    Best answer so far! Jun 18, 2018 at 19:51
13

A related info, to the question...

In django, use timezone.now() for the datetime field, as django supports timezone, it just returns datetime based on the USE TZ settings, or simply timezone 'aware' datetime objects

For a reference, I've got TIME_ZONE = 'Asia/Kolkata' and USE_TZ = True,

from django.utils import timezone
import datetime

print(timezone.now())  # The UTC time
print(timezone.localtime())  # timezone specified time, 
print(datetime.datetime.now())  # default local time

# output
2020-12-11 09:13:32.430605+00:00
2020-12-11 14:43:32.430605+05:30  # IST is UTC+5:30
2020-12-11 14:43:32.510659

refer timezone settings and Internationalization and localization in django docs for more details.

10
 import datetime

Current Date and time

     print(datetime.datetime.now())
     #2019-09-08 09:12:12.473393

Current date only

     print(datetime.date.today())
     #2019-09-08

Current year only

     print(datetime.date.today().year)
     #2019

Current month only

     print(datetime.date.today().month)
     #9

Current day only

     print(datetime.date.today().day)
     #8
1

Another way to get datetime UTC with milliseconds.

from datetime import datetime

datetime.utcnow().isoformat(sep='T', timespec='milliseconds') + 'Z'

2020-10-29T14:46:37.655Z

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