Just to be clear, this is python 2.6, I am using pytz.

This is for an application that only deals with US timezones, I need to be able to anchor a date (today), and get a unix timestamp (epoch time) for 8pm and 11pm in PST only.

This is driving me crazy.

> pacific = pytz.timezone("US/Pacific")

> datetime(2011,2,11,20,0,0,0,pacific)

datetime.datetime(2011, 2, 11, 20, 0, tzinfo=<DstTzInfo 'US/Pacific' PST-1 day, 16:00:0 STD>)

> datetime(2011,2,11,20,0,0,0,pacific).strftime("%s")
'1297454400'

zsh> date -d '@1297454400'    
Fri Feb 11 12:00:00 PST 2011

So, even though I am setting up a timezone, and creating the datetime with that time zone, it is still creating it as UTC and then converting it. This is more of a problem since UTC will be a day ahead when I am trying to do the calculations.

Is there an easy (or at least sensical) way to generate a timestamp for 8pm PST today?

(to be clear, I do understand the value of using UTC in most situations, like database timestamps, or for general storage. This is not one of those situations, I specifically need a timestamp for evening in PST, and UTC should not have to enter into it.)

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What is the issue here - the end date you have is Fri Feb 11 12:00:00 PST 2011 and the start date is 11th Feb? – Mark Feb 11 '11 at 22:45
The issue is that I am trying to create a datetime for 8pm PST, and it is creating it for 8PM UTC and printing it as noon. I seriously just want to make an object for "8PM PST TODAY" and generate a unix timestamp, without having to do a bunch of UTC manipulations. – liam Feb 11 '11 at 22:59
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1 Answer

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Create a tzinfo object utc for the UTC time zone, then try this:

datetime(2011,2,11,20,0,0,0,pacific).astimezone(utc).strftime("%s")
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THANK YOU! That worked, I wish the docs were a little clearer on that, and it really does seem pretty convoluted. – liam Feb 11 '11 at 23:03
Actually, that only worked in the open interpreter I had, its now returning the wrong result once I moved it to script. Ill keep hammering away at it, though. – liam Feb 11 '11 at 23:09
@liam, the time zone support in Python has always seemed half-baked to me. The problem in this case is that Unix/Linux dates are always UTC-based, even when displayed in your local time zone, and you need to adjust the Python date to be likewise. – Mark Ransom Feb 11 '11 at 23:10
Yeah, the issue was that I was running it in the interactive shell, and had already called tzset() (i think, i can't find the reference now), on PST. This did some screwy thing where PST was treated as UTC and screwed up all the pytz calculations. "Half-baked" is an understatement, I am amazed at how pointlessly confusing the datetime library is, considering how clean most of the built-in libraries are. – liam Feb 17 '11 at 19:41
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