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How would I exactly go about offsetting the timestamp returned by datetime.utcnow() by any amount of time such as a day?

For example:

now = datetime.utcnow().isoformat() + 'Z'

I need the above offset by a day. Having a minor issue when my script crosses into the daylight savings time conversion but I dont need to see past it however since it loads today also it dies because the python script errors doing work on the date today now.

1 Answer 1

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To simply add a certain delta time onto UTC add a timedelta:

from datetime import datetime, timedelta

now = (datetime.utcnow() + timedelta(days=3)).isoformat() + 'Z'

print(now)

Output:

2018-11-06T16:55:06.535804Z

More info on python with timezones can be found at Python UTC datetime object's ISO format doesn't include Z (Zulu or Zero offset)

With 3.7 datetime.strptime and datetime.strftime even recognize 01:30 as %z - up to 3.6 the colon would make it crash :)

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  • Thanks much. I couldnt figure out how to pair the two. That works perfectly.
    – TULOA
    Nov 3, 2018 at 17:43
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    Don't use utcnow() since it produces different values depending on the TZ of your system. Use datetime.datetime.now(tz=timezone.utc) instead.
    – ruralcoder
    Feb 28, 2020 at 18:42

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