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How do I iterate over a timespan after days, hours, weeks or months?

Something like:

for date in foo(from_date, to_date, delta=HOURS):
    print date

Where foo is a function, returning an iterator. I've been looking at the calendar module, but that only works for one specific year or month, not between dates.

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I'm baffled -- where is datespan defined? – S.Lott Sep 30 '08 at 15:44
I'm not familiar with the datespan function. It doesn't seem to be in the standard library. – David Locke Sep 30 '08 at 15:44
Or, is it that you want a function with the above signature? – S.Lott Sep 30 '08 at 15:56

5 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

Use dateutil and its rrule implementation, like so:

from dateutil import rrule
from datetime import datetime, timedelta

now = datetime.now()
hundredDaysLater = now + timedelta(days=100)

for dt in rrule.rrule(rrule.MONTHLY, dtstart=now, until=hundredDaysLater):
    print dt

Output is

2008-09-30 23:29:54
2008-10-30 23:29:54
2008-11-30 23:29:54
2008-12-30 23:29:54

Replace MONTHLY with any of YEARLY, MONTHLY, WEEKLY, DAILY, HOURLY, MINUTELY, or SECONDLY. Replace dtstart and until with whatever datetime object you want.

This recipe has the advantage for working in all cases, including MONTHLY. Only caveat I could find is that if you pass a day number that doesn't exist for all months, it skips those months.

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vote up 0 vote down

This library provides a handy calendar tool: mxDateTime, that should be enough :)

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vote up 17 vote down

I don't think there is a method in Python library, but you can easily create one yourself using datetime module:

from datetime import date, datetime, timedelta

def datespan(startDate, endDate, delta=timedelta(days=1)):
    currentDate = startDate
    while currentDate < endDate:
        yield currentDate
        currentDate += delta

Then you could use it like this:

>>> for day in datespan(date(2007, 3, 30), date(2007, 4, 3), 
>>>                     delta=timedelta(days=1)):
>>>     print day
2007-03-30
2007-03-31
2007-04-01
2007-04-02

Or, if you wish to make your delta smaller:

>>> for timestamp in datespan(datetime(2007, 3, 30, 15, 30), 
>>>                           datetime(2007, 3, 30, 18, 35), 
>>>                           delta=timedelta(hours=1)):
>>>     print timestamp
2007-03-30 15:30:00
2007-03-30 16:30:00
2007-03-30 17:30:00
2007-03-30 18:30:00
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vote up 3 vote down

For iterating over months you need a different recipe, since timedeltas can't express "one month".

from datetime import date

def jump_by_month(start_date, end_date, month_step=1):
    current_date = start_date
    while current_date < end_date:
        yield current_date
        carry, new_month = divmod(current_date.month - 1 + month_step, 12)
        new_month += 1
        current_date = current_date.replace(year=current_date.year + carry,
                                            month=new_month)

(NB: you have to subtract 1 from the month for the modulus operation then add it back to new_month, since months in datetime.dates start at 1.)

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Two things: - this code raises ValueError if you set start_date's day to a number that doesn't exist in every month - probably, exactly for that reason there is no month-timedelta; I would suggest using timedelta(days=30) for a good approximation. – DzinX Sep 30 '08 at 17:29
Good catch. Sometimes, though, an approximation isn't good enough (my "pay my rent" reminder has to be at 6:30 on the first of every month). The recipe could be modified—probably with some extra state—to provide sane functionality, whatever that is. – giltay Oct 2 '08 at 14:53
You can also run into problems iterating year-by-year on February 29. – giltay Oct 19 at 13:23
vote up 0 vote down

You should modify this line to make this work correctly:

current_date = current_date.replace(year=current_date.year + carry,month=new_month,day=1)

;)

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