What about this? I presume it can be counted on to handle dates before 1970 and after 2038.
target_datetime_ms = 200000 # or whatever
base_datetime = datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1)
delta = datetime.timedelta(0, 0, 0, target_datetime_ms)
target_datetime = base_datetime + delta
as mentioned in the Python standard lib:
fromtimestamp() may raise ValueError, if the timestamp is out of the
range of values supported by the platform C localtime() or gmtime()
functions. It’s common for this to be restricted to years in 1970
through 2038.
Very obviously, this can be done in one line:
target_dt = datetime(1970, 1, 1) + timedelta(milliseconds=target_dt_ms)
... not only was this obvious from my answer, but the 2015 comment by jfs is also highly misleading, because it calls the variable utc_time
.
Er no: it's not "time", it's datetime
, and it's most definitely NOT UTC. The datetime
with which we're concerned here is a "timezone-naive" datetime
, as opposed to a timezone-aware datetime
. Therefore definitely NOT UTC.
Search on this if you're not familiar with the issue.