I need to create a DateTime object that represents the current time minus 15 minutes.
9 Answers
import datetime and then the magic timedelta stuff:
In [63]: datetime.datetime.now()
Out[63]: datetime.datetime(2010, 12, 27, 14, 39, 19, 700401)
In [64]: datetime.datetime.now() - datetime.timedelta(minutes=15)
Out[64]: datetime.datetime(2010, 12, 27, 14, 24, 21, 684435)
-
2NB, in Python 3 you'll need to pass the timezone to
now()
to avoid an error about subtracting offset-naive and offset-aware datetimes:datetime.datetime.now(datetime.timezone.utc)
– nornagonDec 21, 2017 at 20:18 -
2@nornagon that’s not at all applicable here; it doesn’t matter if the datetime object is aware or naive, subtracting a timedelta works regardless.– Martijn Pieters ♦Jan 29, 2020 at 0:32
import datetime
datetime.datetime.now() - datetime.timedelta(0, 900)
Actually 900 is in seconds. Which is equal to 15 minutes. `15*60 = 900`
-
Your import doesn’t match the code; you import
timedelta
but then usedatetime
attributes. Either import the module, or add the type.– Martijn Pieters ♦Jan 29, 2020 at 0:30
I have provide two methods for doing so for minutes as well as for years and hours if you want to see more examples:
import datetime
print(datetime.datetime.now())
print(datetime.datetime.now() - datetime.timedelta(minutes = 15))
print(datetime.datetime.now() + datetime.timedelta(minutes = -15))
print(datetime.timedelta(hours = 5))
print(datetime.datetime.now() + datetime.timedelta(days = 3))
print(datetime.datetime.now() + datetime.timedelta(days = -9))
print(datetime.datetime.now() - datetime.timedelta(days = 9))
I get the following results:
2016-06-03 16:04:03.706615
2016-06-03 15:49:03.706622
2016-06-03 15:49:03.706642
5:00:00
2016-06-06 16:04:03.706665
2016-05-25 16:04:03.706676
2016-05-25 16:04:03.706687
2016-06-03
16:04:03.706716
Use DateTime in addition to a timedelta
object
http://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html
datetime.datetime.now()-datetime.timedelta(minutes=15)
only the below code in Python 3.7 worked for me
from datetime import datetime,timedelta
print(datetime.now()-timedelta(seconds=900))
-
1
-
1
datetime.datetime.now() - datetime.timedelta(0, 15 * 60)
timedelta
is a "change in time". It takes days as the first parameter and seconds in the second parameter. 15 * 60
seconds is 15 minutes.
If you are using time.time()
and wants timestamp as output
Simply use
CONSTANT_SECONDS = 900 # time in seconds (900 seconds = 15 min)
current_time = int(time.time())
time_before_15_min = current_time - CONSTANT_SECONDS
You can change 900 seconds as per your required time.