255

How to increment the day of a datetime?

for i in range(1, 35)
    date = datetime.datetime(2003, 8, i)
    print(date)

But I need pass through months and years correctly? Any ideas?

8 Answers 8

401
date = datetime.datetime(2003,8,1,12,4,5)
for i in range(5): 
    date += datetime.timedelta(days=1)
    print(date) 
1
89

Incrementing dates can be accomplished using timedelta objects:

import datetime

datetime.datetime.now() + datetime.timedelta(days=1)

Look up timedelta objects in the Python docs: http://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html

0
16

All of the current answers are wrong in some cases as they do not consider that timezones change their offset relative to UTC. So in some cases adding 24h is different from adding a calendar day.

Proposed solution

The following solution works for Samoa and keeps the local time constant.

def add_day(today):
    """
    Add a day to the current day.

    This takes care of historic offset changes and DST.

    Parameters
    ----------
    today : timezone-aware datetime object

    Returns
    -------
    tomorrow : timezone-aware datetime object
    """
    today_utc = today.astimezone(datetime.timezone.utc)
    tz = today.tzinfo
    tomorrow_utc = today_utc + datetime.timedelta(days=1)
    tomorrow_utc_tz = tomorrow_utc.astimezone(tz)
    tomorrow_utc_tz = tomorrow_utc_tz.replace(hour=today.hour,
                                              minute=today.minute,
                                              second=today.second)
    return tomorrow_utc_tz

Tested Code

# core modules
import datetime

# 3rd party modules
import pytz


# add_day methods
def add_day(today):
    """
    Add a day to the current day.

    This takes care of historic offset changes and DST.

    Parameters
    ----------
    today : timezone-aware datetime object

    Returns
    -------
    tomorrow : timezone-aware datetime object
    """
    today_utc = today.astimezone(datetime.timezone.utc)
    tz = today.tzinfo
    tomorrow_utc = today_utc + datetime.timedelta(days=1)
    tomorrow_utc_tz = tomorrow_utc.astimezone(tz)
    tomorrow_utc_tz = tomorrow_utc_tz.replace(hour=today.hour,
                                              minute=today.minute,
                                              second=today.second)
    return tomorrow_utc_tz


def add_day_datetime_timedelta_conversion(today):
    # Correct for Samoa, but dst shift
    today_utc = today.astimezone(datetime.timezone.utc)
    tz = today.tzinfo
    tomorrow_utc = today_utc + datetime.timedelta(days=1)
    tomorrow_utc_tz = tomorrow_utc.astimezone(tz)
    return tomorrow_utc_tz


def add_day_dateutil_relativedelta(today):
    # WRONG!
    from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta
    return today + relativedelta(days=1)


def add_day_datetime_timedelta(today):
    # WRONG!
    return today + datetime.timedelta(days=1)


# Test cases
def test_samoa(add_day):
    """
    Test if add_day properly increases the calendar day for Samoa.

    Due to economic considerations, Samoa went from 2011-12-30 10:00-11:00
    to 2011-12-30 10:00+13:00. Hence the country skipped 2011-12-30 in its
    local time.

    See https://stackoverflow.com/q/52084423/562769

    A common wrong result here is 2011-12-30T23:59:00-10:00. This date never
    happened in Samoa.
    """
    tz = pytz.timezone('Pacific/Apia')
    today_utc = datetime.datetime(2011, 12, 30, 9, 59,
                                  tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc)
    today_tz = today_utc.astimezone(tz)  # 2011-12-29T23:59:00-10:00
    tomorrow = add_day(today_tz)
    return tomorrow.isoformat() == '2011-12-31T23:59:00+14:00'


def test_dst(add_day):
    """Test if add_day properly increases the calendar day if DST happens."""
    tz = pytz.timezone('Europe/Berlin')
    today_utc = datetime.datetime(2018, 3, 25, 0, 59,
                                  tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc)
    today_tz = today_utc.astimezone(tz)  # 2018-03-25T01:59:00+01:00
    tomorrow = add_day(today_tz)
    return tomorrow.isoformat() == '2018-03-26T01:59:00+02:00'


to_test = [(add_day_dateutil_relativedelta, 'relativedelta'),
           (add_day_datetime_timedelta, 'timedelta'),
           (add_day_datetime_timedelta_conversion, 'timedelta+conversion'),
           (add_day, 'timedelta+conversion+dst')]
print('{:<25}: {:>5} {:>5}'.format('Method', 'Samoa', 'DST'))
for method, name in to_test:
    print('{:<25}: {:>5} {:>5}'
          .format(name,
                  test_samoa(method),
                  test_dst(method)))

Test results

Method                   : Samoa   DST
relativedelta            :     0     0
timedelta                :     0     0
timedelta+conversion     :     1     0
timedelta+conversion+dst :     1     1
1
  • 5
    The others answers are not entirely wrong, they are perfectly fine while working with UTC or naive (tzinfo == None) datetimes.
    – Delgan
    Nov 10, 2018 at 19:08
14

Here is another method to add days on date using dateutil's relativedelta.

from datetime import datetime
from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta

print 'Today: ',datetime.now().strftime('%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S') 
date_after_month = datetime.now()+ relativedelta(day=1)
print 'After a Days:', date_after_month.strftime('%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S')

Output:

Today: 25/06/2015 20:41:44

After a Days: 01/06/2015 20:41:44

4
  • 1
    why would you use it instead of timedelta() from stdlib?
    – jfs
    Jun 25, 2015 at 19:45
  • 3
    @J.F.Sebastian Just to share another possible possible way to add day. Jun 26, 2015 at 8:09
  • 3
    If there's no advantage, I don't think it adds value. Jun 22, 2016 at 7:06
  • It does add value to know the possibilities. There's no proof as to which one is faster as another example. SO is for all valid answers.
    – Akaisteph7
    Apr 11, 2022 at 22:28
11

Most Simplest solution

from datetime import timedelta, datetime
date = datetime(2003,8,1,12,4,5)
for i in range(5):
    date += timedelta(days=1)
    print(date)
9

This was a straightforward solution for me:

from datetime import timedelta, datetime

today = datetime.today().strftime("%Y-%m-%d")
tomorrow = datetime.today() + timedelta(1)

3
  • This does not answer OP question directly, because it assumes today() and is not as good as the accepted answer because it assumes default increment unit is days.
    – MarkHu
    Sep 15, 2020 at 21:57
  • @MarkHu I'm not arguing my answer should be accepted. But could you elaborate on what the assumption is for today() and why it is a bad assumption? Also isn't the question asking for days? Is the statement that the accepted answer is a more general one?
    – Aus_10
    Sep 16, 2020 at 1:50
  • 1. The OP asked how to find the next day after an arbitrary date, not today. Your example code assigned a variable named today as a string, then never used it. Better: date = datetime.today() 2. Your last line hardcoded today() and assumed the first arg of timedelta is days (which happens to be correct, but why not name it for clarity?) Better: laterDate = date + timedelta(days=1) # IMHO :)
    – MarkHu
    Sep 17, 2020 at 17:46
0

You can also import timedelta so the code is cleaner.

from datetime import datetime, timedelta
date = datetime.now() + timedelta(seconds=[delta_value])

Then convert to date to string

date = date.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')

Python one liner is

date = (datetime.now() + timedelta(seconds=[delta_value])).strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')
-5

A short solution without libraries at all. :)

d = "8/16/18"
day_value = d[(d.find('/')+1):d.find('/18')]
tomorrow = f"{d[0:d.find('/')]}/{int(day_value)+1}{d[d.find('/18'):len(d)]}".format()
print(tomorrow)
# 8/17/18

Make sure that "string d" is actually in the form of %m/%d/%Y so that you won't have problems transitioning from one month to the next.

2
  • 4
    if you set d to 8/31/18 then this returns 8/32/18. If you change the year from 18, it just breaks.
    – andrewsi
    Jan 9, 2020 at 16:51
  • datetime is a standard library, it's already included in python and there's no penalty for using it. It's actually the other way around.
    – bluesmonk
    Nov 30, 2022 at 11:19

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