There are various ways to alter strftime
so that it handles pre-1900 dates:
- There's a recipe at ASPN that gives you a separate
strftime
method that you can call with a date object: aspn_recipe.strftime(dt, fmt)
if you set it up in a module yourself
- As @stephen-rumbalski said, the external mxDateTime package supports this; but that's using a totally different date object system
- As of version
1.5
, the virtualtime package will patch both time.strftime
and datetime.datetime.strftime
to behave as in Python 3.3
+. You can take advantage of this without enabling the other virtual time functions. (Disclaimer: I work on this package)
Note that Python 2.7
, 3.0
and 3.1
have errors before the year 1900, Python 3.2
has errors before the year 1000. Additionally, pre-3.2
versions interpret years between 0
and 99
as between 1969
and 2068
. Python versions from 3.3
onward support all positive years in datetime
(and negative years in time.strftime
), and time.strftime
doesn't do any mapping of years between 0
and 99
.
The original Python bug explains that they decided that this was a feature in Python 2.7 (presumably since it avoided lack of system strftime
support for these dates), and then gradually worked on it in the Python 3 series, by reimplementing functionality.