I have a function that returns information in seconds, but I need to store that information in hours:minutes:seconds.
Is there an easy way to convert the seconds to this format in Python?
I have a function that returns information in seconds, but I need to store that information in hours:minutes:seconds.
Is there an easy way to convert the seconds to this format in Python?
You can use datetime.timedelta
function:
>>> import datetime
>>> str(datetime.timedelta(seconds=666))
'0:11:06'
str(datetime.timedelta(seconds=60*60*24+1))
= '1 day, 0:00:01'
str(datetime.timedelta(seconds=round(666666.55)))
correctly renders days; supresses the decimal seconds.
timedelta
is not overflow safe and cannot correctly perform mathematical operations, e.g. str(timedelta(hours=8) - timedelta(hours=10))
the result is '-1 day, 22:00:00'
and the integer based solution is exactly for those situations where you need '-02:00:00'
.
1 day, 1:23:45
and your code would change that to 01 day, 1:23:45
. As for @cprn's "overflow safety" warning, that's not weird at all, the objects are not meant to be subtractable in that way. They're a representation of the difference between two timestamps. They're not meant for comparing the difference between two differences between four timestamps (which is what you're basically doing). ;-) Read the docs.
Oct 14, 2019 at 21:39
By using the divmod()
function, which does only a single division to produce both the quotient and the remainder, you can have the result very quickly with only two mathematical operations:
m, s = divmod(seconds, 60)
h, m = divmod(m, 60)
And then use string formatting to convert the result into your desired output:
print('{:d}:{:02d}:{:02d}'.format(h, m, s)) # Python 3
print(f'{h:d}:{m:02d}:{s:02d}') # Python 3.6+
'%d:%02dmn' % (seconds / 60, seconds % 60)
m, d = divmod(m, 31)
. Oooops, no, you can't. Worse, your code will be wrong if leap seconds come into the game. Long story short: use timedelta
and don't mess with the calendar, it will bite you.
timedelta
deal with leap seconds? I suspect not. There are plenty of applications where this simple math is more than sufficient.
Jun 2, 2015 at 15:08
I can hardly name that an easy way (at least I can't remember the syntax), but it is possible to use time.strftime, which gives more control over formatting:
from time import strftime
from time import gmtime
strftime("%H:%M:%S", gmtime(666))
'00:11:06'
strftime("%H:%M:%S", gmtime(60*60*24))
'00:00:00'
gmtime is used to convert seconds to special tuple format that strftime()
requires.
Note: Truncates after 23:59:59
time.strftime('%d %H:%M:%S', time.gmtime(1))
=> '1 day, 0:00:01'.
Jan 1, 2016 at 21:49
This is my quick trick:
from humanfriendly import format_timespan
secondsPassed = 1302
format_timespan(secondsPassed)
# '21 minutes and 42 seconds'
For more info Visit: https://humanfriendly.readthedocs.io/en/latest/api.html#humanfriendly.format_timespan
datetime
:':0>8'
format:from datetime import timedelta
"{:0>8}".format(str(timedelta(seconds=66)))
# Result: '00:01:06'
"{:0>8}".format(str(timedelta(seconds=666777)))
# Result: '7 days, 17:12:57'
"{:0>8}".format(str(timedelta(seconds=60*60*49+109)))
# Result: '2 days, 1:01:49'
':0>8'
format:"{}".format(str(timedelta(seconds=66)))
# Result: '00:01:06'
"{}".format(str(timedelta(seconds=666777)))
# Result: '7 days, 17:12:57'
"{}".format(str(timedelta(seconds=60*60*49+109)))
# Result: '2 days, 1:01:49'
time
:from time import gmtime
from time import strftime
# NOTE: The following resets if it goes over 23:59:59!
strftime("%H:%M:%S", gmtime(125))
# Result: '00:02:05'
strftime("%H:%M:%S", gmtime(60*60*24-1))
# Result: '23:59:59'
strftime("%H:%M:%S", gmtime(60*60*24))
# Result: '00:00:00'
strftime("%H:%M:%S", gmtime(666777))
# Result: '17:12:57'
# Wrong
"{:0>8}".format(timedelta(milliseconds=66)) '0:00:00.066000'
without ':0>8':
example is missing a leading 0. {:0>8}
zero pads to the left 8 zeroes.
Jul 24, 2017 at 22:11
time.time()-start
variable. Any insight? TypeError: non-empty format string passed to object.__format__
datetime.now()
instead of time.time()
to generate my timedelta object and I get the same error.
str()
if you are going use a format such as 0>8
: "{:0>8}".format(str(datetime.timedelta(seconds=666777)))
. Check this answer for more info.
The following set worked for me.
def sec_to_hours(seconds):
a=str(seconds//3600)
b=str((seconds%3600)//60)
c=str((seconds%3600)%60)
d=["{} hours {} mins {} seconds".format(a, b, c)]
return d
print(sec_to_hours(10000))
# ['2 hours 46 mins 40 seconds']
print(sec_to_hours(60*60*24+105))
# ['24 hours 1 mins 45 seconds']
a
, b
, and c
are integers — integers converted to strings actually.
Aug 27, 2021 at 13:02
A bit off topic answer but maybe useful to someone
def time_format(seconds: int) -> str:
if seconds is not None:
seconds = int(seconds)
d = seconds // (3600 * 24)
h = seconds // 3600 % 24
m = seconds % 3600 // 60
s = seconds % 3600 % 60
if d > 0:
return '{:02d}D {:02d}H {:02d}m {:02d}s'.format(d, h, m, s)
elif h > 0:
return '{:02d}H {:02d}m {:02d}s'.format(h, m, s)
elif m > 0:
return '{:02d}m {:02d}s'.format(m, s)
elif s > 0:
return '{:02d}s'.format(s)
return '-'
Results in:
print(time_format(25*60*60 + 125))
>>> 01D 01H 02m 05s
print(time_format(17*60*60 + 35))
>>> 17H 00m 35s
print(time_format(3500))
>>> 58m 20s
print(time_format(21))
>>> 21s
hours (h) calculated by floor division (by //) of seconds by 3600 (60 min/hr * 60 sec/min)
minutes (m) calculated by floor division of remaining seconds (remainder from hour calculation, by %) by 60 (60 sec/min)
similarly, seconds (s) by remainder of hour and minutes calculation.
Rest is just string formatting!
def hms(seconds):
h = seconds // 3600
m = seconds % 3600 // 60
s = seconds % 3600 % 60
return '{:02d}:{:02d}:{:02d}'.format(h, m, s)
print(hms(7500)) # Should print 02h05m00s
This is how I got it.
def sec2time(sec, n_msec=3):
''' Convert seconds to 'D days, HH:MM:SS.FFF' '''
if hasattr(sec,'__len__'):
return [sec2time(s) for s in sec]
m, s = divmod(sec, 60)
h, m = divmod(m, 60)
d, h = divmod(h, 24)
if n_msec > 0:
pattern = '%%02d:%%02d:%%0%d.%df' % (n_msec+3, n_msec)
else:
pattern = r'%02d:%02d:%02d'
if d == 0:
return pattern % (h, m, s)
return ('%d days, ' + pattern) % (d, h, m, s)
Some examples:
$ sec2time(10, 3)
Out: '00:00:10.000'
$ sec2time(1234567.8910, 0)
Out: '14 days, 06:56:07'
$ sec2time(1234567.8910, 4)
Out: '14 days, 06:56:07.8910'
$ sec2time([12, 345678.9], 3)
Out: ['00:00:12.000', '4 days, 00:01:18.900']
str(datetime.timedelta(seconds=666))
Jan 1, 2016 at 21:38
666.0
and 666.1
values.
Mar 11, 2017 at 15:50
If you need to get datetime.time
value, you can use this trick:
my_time = (datetime(1970,1,1) + timedelta(seconds=my_seconds)).time()
You cannot add timedelta
to time
, but can add it to datetime
.
UPD: Yet another variation of the same technique:
my_time = (datetime.fromordinal(1) + timedelta(seconds=my_seconds)).time()
Instead of 1
you can use any number greater than 0. Here we use the fact that datetime.fromordinal
will always return datetime
object with time
component being zero.
dateutil.relativedelta
is convenient if you need to access hours, minutes and seconds as floats as well. datetime.timedelta
does not provide a similar interface.
from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta
rt = relativedelta(seconds=5440)
print(rt.seconds)
print('{:02d}:{:02d}:{:02d}'.format(
int(rt.hours), int(rt.minutes), int(rt.seconds)))
Prints
40.0
01:30:40
seconds=5440
instead of seconds=5540
. I like your answer, though!
Here is a way that I always use: (no matter how inefficient it is)
seconds = 19346
def zeroes (num):
if num < 10: num = "0" + num
return num
def return_hms(second, apply_zeroes):
sec = second % 60
min_ = second // 60 % 60
hrs = second // 3600
if apply_zeroes > 0:
sec = zeroes(sec)
min_ = zeroes(min_)
if apply_zeroes > 1:
hrs = zeroes(hrs)
return "{}:{}:{}".format(hrs, min_, sec)
print(return_hms(seconds, 1))
RESULT:
5:22:26
The return_hms()
function is used like this:
The first variable (second) is the amount of seconds you want to convert into h:m:s.
The second variable (apply_zeroes) is formatting:
0 or less: Apply no zeroes whatsoever
1: Apply zeroes to minutes and seconds when they're below 10.
2 or more: Apply zeroes to any value (including hours) when they're below 10.
Here is a simple program that reads the current time and converts it to a time of day in hours, minutes, and seconds
import time as tm #import package time
timenow = tm.ctime() #fetch local time in string format
timeinhrs = timenow[11:19]
t=tm.time()#time.time() gives out time in seconds since epoch.
print("Time in HH:MM:SS format is: ",timeinhrs,"\nTime since epoch is : ",t/(3600*24),"days")
The output is
Time in HH:MM:SS format is: 13:32:45
Time since epoch is : 18793.335252338384 days
Here's a quick one-liner:
(s = Seconds)
':'.join([str(int(s/60/60 % 60)), str(int(s/60 % 60)), str(int(s%60))])
Output:
'12:31:20'
You can divide seconds by 60 to get the minutes
import time
seconds = time.time()
minutes = seconds / 60
print(minutes)
When you divide it by 60 again, you will get the hours
In my case I wanted to achieve format "HH:MM:SS.fff". I solved it like this:
timestamp = 28.97000002861023
str(datetime.fromtimestamp(timestamp)+timedelta(hours=-1)).split(' ')[1][:12]
'00:00:28.970'
The solutions above will work if you're looking to convert a single value for "seconds since midnight" on a date to a datetime object or a string with HH:MM:SS, but I landed on this page because I wanted to do this on a whole dataframe column in pandas. If anyone else is wondering how to do this for more than a single value at a time, what ended up working for me was:
mydate='2015-03-01'
df['datetime'] = datetime.datetime(mydate) + \
pandas.to_timedelta(df['seconds_since_midnight'], 's')
I looked every answers here and still tried my own
def a(t):
print(f"{int(t/3600)}H {int((t/60)%60) if t/3600>0 else int(t/60)}M {int(t%60)}S")
Results:
>>> a(7500)
2H 5M 0S
>>> a(3666)
1H 1M 6S
Python: 3.8.8
A custom solution I came up with:
import math
hours = math.floor(seconds / 3600)
seconds -= hours * 3600
minutes = math.floor(seconds / 60)
seconds -= minutes * 60
seconds = math.floor(seconds)
return '{:02d}:{:02d}:{:02d}'.format(hours, minutes, seconds)
division = 3623 // 3600 #to hours
division2 = 600 // 60 #to minutes
print (division) #write hours
print (division2) #write minutes
PS My code is unprofessional