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I have a timezone aware timestamptz field in PostgreSQL. When I pull data from the table, I then want to subtract the time right now so I can get it's age.

The problem I'm having is that both datetime.datetime.now() and datetime.datetime.utcnow() seem to return timezone unaware timestamps, which results in me getting this error:

TypeError: can't subtract offset-naive and offset-aware datetimes

Is there a way to avoid this (preferably without a third-party module being used).

EDIT: Thanks for the suggestions, however trying to adjust the timezone seems to give me errors.. so I'm just going to use timezone unaware timestamps in PG and always insert using:

NOW() AT TIME ZONE 'UTC'

That way all my timestamps are UTC by default (even though it's more annoying to do this).

Hopefully I can eventually find a fix for this.

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2 Answers

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have you tried to remove the timezone awareness?

from http://pytz.sourceforge.net/

naive = dt.replace(tzinfo=None)

may have to add time zone conversion as well.

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This seems to be the only way to do it. Seems pretty lame that python's got such crappy support for timezones that it needs a third-party module to work with timestamps properly.. – Ian Apr 28 at 4:24
python 3000 should be fine. – phillc Apr 28 at 5:04
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Is there some pressing reason why you can't handle the age calculation in PostgreSQL itself? Something like

select *, age(timeStampField) as timeStampAge from myTable
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Yes there is.. but I was mostly asking because I want to avoid doing all the calculations in postgre. – Ian Apr 28 at 12:27

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