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I'm trying to extract time stamps from a list that contains different timezones. I am using dateutil.parser. I believe I want to use the parse function for this, including timezone information, but it appears it doesn't want to accept them. Can someone tell me where I'm going wrong?

from dateutil.parser import parse
timezone_info = {
    "PDT": "UTC -7",
    "PST": "UTC -8",
    }
date_list = ['Oct 21, 2019 19:30 PDT',
             'Nov 4, 2019 18:30 PST']

for dates in date_list:
    print(parse(dates))
# This gives:
# 2019-10-21 19:30:00
# 2019-11-04 18:30:00

for date in date_list:
    print(parse(dates, tzinfos = timezone_info))

This is the output:

2019-10-21 19:30:00
2019-11-04 18:30:00
C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\parser\_parser.py:1218: UnknownTimezoneWarning: tzname PDT identified but not understood.  Pass `tzinfos` argument in order to correctly return a timezone-aware datetime.  In a future version, this will raise an exception.
  category=UnknownTimezoneWarning)
C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\parser\_parser.py:1218: UnknownTimezoneWarning: tzname PST identified but not understood.  Pass `tzinfos` argument in order to correctly return a timezone-aware datetime.  In a future version, this will raise an exception.
  category=UnknownTimezoneWarning)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:/Users/mbsta/PycharmProjects/untitled2/tester.py", line 16, in <module>
    print(parse(dates, tzinfos = timezone_info))
  File "C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\parser\_parser.py", line 1374, in parse
    return DEFAULTPARSER.parse(timestr, **kwargs)
  File "C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\parser\_parser.py", line 660, in parse
    ret = self._build_tzaware(ret, res, tzinfos)
  File "C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\parser\_parser.py", line 1185, in _build_tzaware
    tzinfo = self._build_tzinfo(tzinfos, res.tzname, res.tzoffset)
  File "C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\parser\_parser.py", line 1175, in _build_tzinfo
    tzinfo = tz.tzstr(tzdata)
  File "C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\tz\_factories.py", line 69, in __call__
    cls.instance(s, posix_offset))
  File "C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\tz\_factories.py", line 22, in instance
    return type.__call__(cls, *args, **kwargs)
  File "C:\Users\mbsta\Anaconda3\envs\untitled2\lib\site-packages\dateutil\tz\tz.py", line 1087, in __init__
    raise ValueError("unknown string format")
ValueError: unknown string format

Process finished with exit code 1

1 Answer 1

2

I believe the issue here is that the offsets you are specifying are not a valid format for tzstr, which expects something that looks like a TZ variable. If you change the strings to "PST+8" and "PDT+7", respectively, it will work as intended.

That said, I think you'd be much better off using a tzfile, which is one of the main things that tzinfos is for:

from dateutil import parser
from dateutil import tz
PACIFIC = tz.gettz("America/Los_Angeles")
timezone_info = {"PST": PACIFIC, "PDT": PACIFIC}

date_list = ["Oct 21, 2019 19:30 PDT",
             "Nov 4, 2019 18:30 PST"]

for dtstr in date_list:
    print(parser.parse(dtstr, tzinfos=timezone_info))

This prints:

2019-10-21 19:30:00-07:00
2019-11-04 18:30:00-08:00

And since it attaches a full time zone offset, you can do arithmetic on the results without worrying (since it's a full time zone, not a fixed offset).

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  • Thank you sir, much appreciated! My date list will have a mix of all kinds of abbreviated timezones. will I need to create something like 'PACIFIC = tz.gettz("America/Los_Angeles") 'and ' "PST": PACIFIC' for each one that could appear?
    – MBS
    Apr 12, 2020 at 3:04
  • Yes, three/four letter abbreviations are generally ambiguous. If you want to disambiguate between them, you need to provide the context. You can use a mapping like a dictionary or pass a function to tzinfos.
    – Paul
    Apr 12, 2020 at 13:53

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