I have a date string with the format 'Mon Feb 15 2010'. I want to change the format to '15/02/2010'. How can I do this?
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1Duplicate of all of these: stackoverflow.com/search?q=%5Bpython%5D+parse+date. Exact duplicate of thise: stackoverflow.com/questions/1713594/…– S.LottFeb 15, 2010 at 11:13
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Does this answer your question? Converting string into datetime– AMCSep 18, 2020 at 20:31
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Does this answer your question? Parse a string with a date to a datetime object– Peter MortensenOct 30 at 13:51
10 Answers
The datetime
module could help you with that:
datetime.datetime.strptime(input_date_string, input_format).strftime(output_format)
For the specific example, you could do:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> datetime.strptime('Mon Feb 15 2010', '%a %b %d %Y').strftime('%d/%m/%Y')
'15/02/2010'
Learn more about different formats here.
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format1
needs to be a string to express the input date string's format.format2
is the target string format to output. Apr 15, 2015 at 21:45 -
3Tutorial for strptime and its format string: tutorialspoint.com/python/time_strptime.htm– stenixOct 29, 2015 at 7:56
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strptime
andstrftime
are really powerful functions. It's weird I couldn't find them in the python docs– pouyaNov 27, 2020 at 12:08
You can install the dateutil library. Its parse
function can figure out what format a string is in without having to specify the format like you do with datetime.strptime
.
from dateutil.parser import parse
dt = parse('Mon Feb 15 2010')
print(dt)
# datetime.datetime(2010, 2, 15, 0, 0)
print(dt.strftime('%d/%m/%Y'))
# 15/02/2010
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1dateutil.parse is a better alternative if the exact format of a legal ISO string is unknown. ISO may or may not contain microseconds. It may or may not contain trailing "Z". datetime.strptime is not flexible enough to accomodate for that. Dec 12, 2013 at 10:51
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12Pase Date should be used with care. parse('12.07.2017') returns datetime(2017, 12, 7, ..) but parse('13.07.2017') returns .datetime(2017, 7, 13, ...)– ego2dot0Jun 12, 2017 at 9:02
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2In
python 3.x
needs to installpython-dateutil
pip install python-dateutil
Aug 26, 2019 at 15:19 -
2Just an update from Michael Kariv, parse provides a param
dayfirst
that will be used to deferentiate between YDM and YMD dates parse docs.)– EricDec 27, 2021 at 20:50
Convert a string to a datetime object:
from datetime import datetime
s = "2016-03-26T09:25:55.000Z"
f = "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%fZ"
out = datetime.strptime(s, f)
print(out)
Output:
2016-03-26 09:25:55
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1This is not according to the format he asked, which had a month string "Feb" in it. Oct 30, 2019 at 7:57
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2@ShahirAnsari you can change the format as you like refer "docs.python.org/3/library/datetime.html" Oct 30, 2019 at 10:04
>>> from_date="Mon Feb 15 2010"
>>> import time
>>> conv=time.strptime(from_date,"%a %b %d %Y")
>>> time.strftime("%d/%m/%Y",conv)
'15/02/2010'
As this question comes often, here is the simple explanation.
datetime
or time
module has two important functions.
- strftime - creates a string representation of date or time from a datetime or time object.
- strptime - creates a datetime or time object from a string.
In both cases, we need a formating string. It is the representation that tells how the date or time is formatted in your string.
Now lets assume we have a date object.
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> d = datetime(2010, 2, 15)
>>> d
datetime.datetime(2010, 2, 15, 0, 0)
If we want to create a string from this date in the format 'Mon Feb 15 2010'
>>> s = d.strftime('%a %b %d %y')
>>> print s
Mon Feb 15 10
Lets assume we want to convert this s
again to a datetime
object.
>>> new_date = datetime.strptime(s, '%a %b %d %y')
>>> print new_date
2010-02-15 00:00:00
Refer This document all formatting directives regarding datetime.
@codeling and @user1767754 : The following two lines will work. I saw no one posted the complete solution for the example problem that was asked. Hopefully this is enough explanation.
import datetime
x = datetime.datetime.strptime("Mon Feb 15 2010", "%a %b %d %Y").strftime("%d/%m/%Y")
print(x)
Output:
15/02/2010
You may achieve this using pandas as well:
import pandas as pd
pd.to_datetime('Mon Feb 15 2010', format='%a %b %d %Y').strftime('%d/%m/%Y')
Output:
'15/02/2010'
You may apply pandas approach for different datatypes as:
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
def reformat_date(date_string, old_format, new_format):
return pd.to_datetime(date_string, format=old_format, errors='ignore').strftime(new_format)
date_string = 'Mon Feb 15 2010'
date_list = ['Mon Feb 15 2010', 'Wed Feb 17 2010']
date_array = np.array(date_list)
date_series = pd.Series(date_list)
old_format = '%a %b %d %Y'
new_format = '%d/%m/%Y'
print(reformat_date(date_string, old_format, new_format))
print(reformat_date(date_list, old_format, new_format).values)
print(reformat_date(date_array, old_format, new_format).values)
print(date_series.apply(lambda x: reformat_date(x, old_format, new_format)).values)
Output:
15/02/2010
['15/02/2010' '17/02/2010']
['15/02/2010' '17/02/2010']
['15/02/2010' '17/02/2010']
Just for the sake of completion: when parsing a date using strptime()
and the date contains the name of a day, month, etc, be aware that you have to account for the locale.
It's mentioned as a footnote in the docs as well.
As an example:
import locale
print(locale.getlocale())
>> ('nl_BE', 'ISO8859-1')
from datetime import datetime
datetime.strptime('6-Mar-2016', '%d-%b-%Y').strftime('%Y-%m-%d')
>> ValueError: time data '6-Mar-2016' does not match format '%d-%b-%Y'
locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'en_US')
datetime.strptime('6-Mar-2016', '%d-%b-%Y').strftime('%Y-%m-%d')
>> '2016-03-06'
Use the datetime library. Look up 9.1.7. Especially strptime() and strftime().
Behavior examples: 3. Dates and Times
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for the error above nimmyliji you should have done datetime.datetime.strptime("Mon Feb 15 2010", "%a %b %d %Y").strftime("%d/%m/%Y") it gives '15/02/2010' Feb 15, 2010 at 11:20
If you dont want to define the input date format then, Install dateparser (pip install dateparser) and,
from dateparser import parse
parse("Mon Feb 15 2010").strftime("%d/%m/%Y")