488

I see a lot on converting a date string to an datetime object in Python, but I want to go the other way.
I've got

datetime.datetime(2012, 2, 23, 0, 0)

and I would like to convert it to string like '2/23/2012'.

15 Answers 15

743

You can use strftime to help you format your date.

E.g.,

import datetime
t = datetime.datetime(2012, 2, 23, 0, 0)
t.strftime('%m/%d/%Y')

will yield:

'02/23/2012'

More information about formatting see here

5
  • 7
    Very useful for DateTimeField or DateField in django. Thanks
    – erajuan
    Feb 24, 2016 at 20:46
  • 4
    use t = datetime.datetime.now() to use current date
    – gizzmole
    Jul 17, 2017 at 18:36
  • As far as I can tell from the docs there is no way to return a non-zero padded date ie '2/23/2012'.
    – Ron Kalian
    Oct 31, 2017 at 10:41
  • 1
    @Ron Kalian Non-zero padded: t.strftime('%-m/%-d/%-y') Aug 23, 2020 at 9:49
  • f-strings are a lot nicer if you're on python 3.6+. See answer below Dec 2, 2020 at 15:48
299
+100

date and datetime objects (and time as well) support a mini-language to specify output, and there are two ways to access it:

So your example could look like:

  • dt.strftime('The date is %b %d, %Y')
  • 'The date is {:%b %d, %Y}'.format(dt)
  • f'The date is {dt:%b %d, %Y}'

In all three cases the output is:

The date is Feb 23, 2012

For completeness' sake: you can also directly access the attributes of the object, but then you only get the numbers:

'The date is %s/%s/%s' % (dt.month, dt.day, dt.year)
# The date is 02/23/2012

The time taken to learn the mini-language is worth it.


For reference, here are the codes used in the mini-language:

  • %a Weekday as locale’s abbreviated name.
  • %A Weekday as locale’s full name.
  • %w Weekday as a decimal number, where 0 is Sunday and 6 is Saturday.
  • %d Day of the month as a zero-padded decimal number.
  • %b Month as locale’s abbreviated name.
  • %B Month as locale’s full name.
  • %m Month as a zero-padded decimal number. 01, ..., 12
  • %y Year without century as a zero-padded decimal number. 00, ..., 99
  • %Y Year with century as a decimal number. 1970, 1988, 2001, 2013
  • %H Hour (24-hour clock) as a zero-padded decimal number. 00, ..., 23
  • %I Hour (12-hour clock) as a zero-padded decimal number. 01, ..., 12
  • %p Locale’s equivalent of either AM or PM.
  • %M Minute as a zero-padded decimal number. 00, ..., 59
  • %S Second as a zero-padded decimal number. 00, ..., 59
  • %f Microsecond as a decimal number, zero-padded on the left. 000000, ..., 999999
  • %z UTC offset in the form +HHMM or -HHMM (empty if naive), +0000, -0400, +1030
  • %Z Time zone name (empty if naive), UTC, EST, CST
  • %j Day of the year as a zero-padded decimal number. 001, ..., 366
  • %U Week number of the year (Sunday is the first) as a zero padded decimal number.
  • %W Week number of the year (Monday is first) as a decimal number.
  • %c Locale’s appropriate date and time representation.
  • %x Locale’s appropriate date representation.
  • %X Locale’s appropriate time representation.
  • %% A literal '%' character.
2
  • 11
    Sexiest version of the answer here
    – SARose
    Jul 2, 2020 at 17:47
  • 1
    I think we have different interpretations of what makes "sexy". :-) Jul 3, 2020 at 1:56
69

Another option:

import datetime
now=datetime.datetime.now()
now.isoformat()
# ouptut --> '2016-03-09T08:18:20.860968'
1
  • 5
    Though the question is about getting "date only", I came for ^this, so thanks. Also, to get a bit more humane string: datetime.datetime.now().ctime() ==> 'Wed Sep 4 13:12:39 2019'
    – Denis
    Sep 4, 2019 at 13:12
24

If you are looking for a simple way of datetime to string conversion and can omit the format. You can convert datetime object to str and then use array slicing.

In [1]: from datetime import datetime

In [2]: now = datetime.now()

In [3]: str(now)
Out[3]: '2019-04-26 18:03:50.941332'

In [5]: str(now)[:10]
Out[5]: '2019-04-26'

In [6]: str(now)[:19]
Out[6]: '2019-04-26 18:03:50'

But note the following thing. If other solutions will rise an AttributeError when the variable is None in this case you will receive a 'None' string.

In [9]: str(None)[:19]
Out[9]: 'None'
1
  • Python has more consistent methods to convert Datetime from object to string, like strftime. Slices will depend on length from your string what is prone to error
    – Vash79
    Nov 25 at 19:01
15

You could use simple string formatting methods:

>>> dt = datetime.datetime(2012, 2, 23, 0, 0)
>>> '{0.month}/{0.day}/{0.year}'.format(dt)
'2/23/2012'
>>> '%s/%s/%s' % (dt.month, dt.day, dt.year)
'2/23/2012'
1
  • 4
    similarly, you can do something like '{:%Y-%m-%d %H:%M}'.format(datetime(2001, 2, 3, 4, 5)). See more at pyformat.info
    – mway
    Dec 16, 2015 at 14:23
15

You can easly convert the datetime to string in this way:

from datetime import datetime

date_time = datetime(2012, 2, 23, 0, 0)
date = date_time.strftime('%m/%d/%Y')
print("date: %s" % date)

These are some of the patterns that you can use to convert datetime to string:

datetime to string patterns

For better understanding, you can take a look at this article on how to convert strings to datetime and datetime to string in Python or the official strftime documentation

12

type-specific formatting can be used as well:

t = datetime.datetime(2012, 2, 23, 0, 0)
"{:%m/%d/%Y}".format(t)

Output:

'02/23/2012'
11

The sexiest version by far is with format strings.

from datetime import datetime

print(f'{datetime.today():%Y-%m-%d}')
10

If you want the time as well, just go with

datetime.datetime.now().__str__()

Prints 2019-07-11 19:36:31.118766 in console for me

4

You can convert datetime to string.

published_at = "{}".format(self.published_at)
1
  • Or, using the f-string syntax: published_at = f"{self.published_at}"
    – Marco Roy
    May 7, 2022 at 9:18
4
end_date = "2021-04-18 16:00:00"
end_date_string = end_date.strftime("%Y-%m-%d")
print(end_date_string)
3

It is possible to convert a datetime object into a string by working directly with the components of the datetime object.

from datetime import date  

myDate = date.today()    
#print(myDate) would output 2017-05-23 because that is today
#reassign the myDate variable to myDate = myDate.month 
#then you could print(myDate.month) and you would get 5 as an integer
dateStr = str(myDate.month)+ "/" + str(myDate.day) + "/" + str(myDate.year)    
# myDate.month is equal to 5 as an integer, i use str() to change it to a 
# string I add(+)the "/" so now I have "5/" then myDate.day is 23 as
# an integer i change it to a string with str() and it is added to the "5/"   
# to get "5/23" and then I add another "/" now we have "5/23/" next is the 
# year which is 2017 as an integer, I use the function str() to change it to 
# a string and add it to the rest of the string.  Now we have "5/23/2017" as 
# a string. The final line prints the string.

print(dateStr)  

Output --> 5/23/2017

0
2

String concatenation, str.join, can be used to build the string.

d = datetime.now()
'/'.join(str(x) for x in (d.month, d.day, d.year))
'3/7/2016'
0

An approach to how far from now

  • support different languages by passing in param li, a list corresponding timestamp.
from datetime import datetime
from dateutil import parser

t1 = parser.parse("Tue May 26 15:14:45 2021")
t2 = parser.parse("Tue May 26 15:9:45 2021")
# 5min
t3 = parser.parse("Tue May 26 11:14:45 2021")
# 4h
t4 = parser.parse("Tue May 26 11:9:45 2021")
# 1day
t6 = parser.parse("Tue May 25 11:14:45 2021")
# 1day4h
t7 = parser.parse("Tue May 25 11:9:45 2021")
# 1day4h5min
t8 = parser.parse("Tue May 19 11:9:45 2021")
# 1w
t9 = parser.parse("Tue Apr 26 11:14:45 2021")
# 1m
t10 = parser.parse("Tue Oct 08 06:00:20 2019") 
# 1y7m, 19m
t11 = parser.parse("Tue Jan 08 00:00:00 2019") 
# 2y4m, 28m


# create: date of object creation
# now: time now
# li: a list of string indicate time (in any language)
# lst: suffix (in any language)
# long: display length
def howLongAgo(create, now, li, lst, long=2):
    dif = create - now
    print(dif.days)
    sec = dif.days * 24 * 60 * 60 + dif.seconds
    minute = sec // 60
    sec %= 60
    hour = minute // 60
    minute %= 60
    day = hour // 24
    hour %= 24
    week = day // 7
    day %= 7
    month = (week * 7) // 30
    week %= 30
    year = month // 12
    month %= 12
    s = []
    for ii, tt in enumerate([sec, minute, hour, day, week, month, year]):
        ss = li[ii]
        if tt != 0:
            if tt == 1:
                s.append(str(tt) + ss)
            else:
                s.append(str(tt) + ss + 's')

    return ' '.join(list(reversed(s))[:long]) + ' ' + lst



t = howLongAgo(t1, t11, [
    'second', 
    'minute',
    'hour', 
    'day',
    'week', 
    'month',
    'year',
], 'ago')
print(t)
# 2years 4months ago
0

I have used this method to insert dates to JSON object

my_json_string = json.dumps({'date_of_birth': '''{}'''.format(date_of_birth)})

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.