80

Is it possible with Python to set the timezone just like this in PHP:

date_default_timezone_set("Europe/London");
$Year = date('y');
$Month = date('m');
$Day = date('d');
$Hour = date('H');
$Minute = date('i');

I can't really install any other modules etc as I'm using shared web hosting.

Any ideas?

1

5 Answers 5

144
>>> import os, time
>>> time.strftime('%X %x %Z')
'12:45:20 08/19/09 CDT'
>>> os.environ['TZ'] = 'Europe/London'
>>> time.tzset()
>>> time.strftime('%X %x %Z')
'18:45:39 08/19/09 BST'

To get the specific values you've listed:

>>> year = time.strftime('%Y')
>>> month = time.strftime('%m')
>>> day = time.strftime('%d')
>>> hour = time.strftime('%H')
>>> minute = time.strftime('%M')

See here for a complete list of directives. Keep in mind that the strftime() function will always return a string, not an integer or other type.

1
  • 36
    "tzset" is a Unix only function. Arrg!
    – mjhm
    Jul 17, 2012 at 17:40
15

Be aware that running

import os
os.system("tzutil /s \"Central Standard Time\"");

will alter Windows system time, NOT just the local python environment time (so is definitley NOT the same as:

>>> os.environ['TZ'] = 'Europe/London'
>>> time.tzset()

which will only set in the current environment time (in Unix only)

1
  • and even if you run os.system("tzutil /s \"Central Standard Time\"");, it does NOT change the local python environment.
    – Billy Cao
    Nov 25, 2021 at 3:19
6

For windows you can use:

Running Windows command prompt commands in python.

import os
os.system('tzutil /s "Central Standard Time"')

In windows command prompt try:

This gives current timezone:

tzutil /g

This gives a list of timezones:

tzutil /l

This will set the timezone:

tzutil /s "Central America Standard Time"

For further reference: http://woshub.com/how-to-set-timezone-from-command-prompt-in-windows/

2
  • 2
    specific to windows, though Sep 30, 2017 at 0:33
  • 4
    Yes but that completes Richard Simões answer with tzset which is only available on Unix systems. Apr 19, 2019 at 8:39
6

You can use pytz as well..

import datetime
import pytz
def utcnow():
    return datetime.datetime.now(tz=pytz.utc)
utcnow()
   datetime.datetime(2020, 8, 15, 14, 45, 19, 182703, tzinfo=<UTC>)
utcnow().isoformat()

'

2020-08-15T14:45:21.982600+00:00'

1
1

It's not an answer, but...

To get datetime components individually, better use datetime.timetuple:

from datetime import datetime
time = datetime.now()
time.timetuple()
#-> time.struct_time(
#    tm_year=2014, tm_mon=9, tm_mday=7, 
#    tm_hour=2, tm_min=38, tm_sec=5, 
#    tm_wday=6, tm_yday=250, tm_isdst=-1
#)

It's now easy to get the parts:

ts = time.timetuple()
ts.tm_year
ts.tm_mon
ts.tm_mday
ts.tm_hour
ts.tm_min
ts.tm_sec
3
  • Neither time nor datetime seem to have the function timetuple()
    – Lampe2020
    Aug 11, 2023 at 16:03
  • @Lampe2020 but they have :) Import datetime from datetime, then do datetime.now(), and the resulting datetime object will have the method :)
    – kolypto
    Aug 16, 2023 at 17:39
  • Ah, so it's not the datetime.now() but more like datetime.datetime.now() method.
    – Lampe2020
    Aug 17, 2023 at 13:11

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