495

I have a timezone aware timestamptz field in PostgreSQL. When I pull data from the table, I then want to subtract the time right now so I can get it's age.

The problem I'm having is that both datetime.datetime.now() and datetime.datetime.utcnow() seem to return timezone unaware timestamps, which results in me getting this error:

TypeError: can't subtract offset-naive and offset-aware datetimes 

Is there a way to avoid this (preferably without a third-party module being used).

EDIT: Thanks for the suggestions, however trying to adjust the timezone seems to give me errors.. so I'm just going to use timezone unaware timestamps in PG and always insert using:

NOW() AT TIME ZONE 'UTC'

That way all my timestamps are UTC by default (even though it's more annoying to do this).

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12 Answers 12

470

Have you tried to remove the timezone awareness?

From http://pytz.sourceforge.net/

naive = dt.replace(tzinfo=None)

may have to add time zone conversion as well.

edit: Please be aware the age of this answer. An answer involving ADDing the timezone info instead of removing it in python 3 is below. https://stackoverflow.com/a/25662061/93380

12
  • 42
    This seems to be the only way to do it. Seems pretty lame that python's got such crappy support for timezones that it needs a third-party module to work with timestamps properly..
    – Ian
    Apr 28, 2009 at 4:24
  • 41
    (Just for the record) Actually adding information about time zone may be a better idea: stackoverflow.com/a/4530166/548696
    – Tadeck
    Jun 21, 2012 at 4:59
  • 9
    naive datetime objects are inherently ambiguous and therefore they should be avoided. It is easy to add tzinfo instead
    – jfs
    Sep 4, 2014 at 9:39
  • 3
    UTC doesn't need a timezone, by definition. If the other datetime object is timezone aware then surely that provides the offset relative to UTC. UTC times may not have a timezone but they are not 'naive' and Python is handling this wrongly.
    – Kylotan
    Jun 5, 2015 at 10:23
  • 2
    @Kylotan: UTC is a timezone in this context (as represented by tzinfo class). Look at datetime.timezone.utc or pytz.utc. For example, 1970-01-01 00:00:00 is ambiguous and you have to add a timezone to disambiguate: 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC. You see, you have to add new information; the timestamp by itself is ambiguous.
    – jfs
    Jun 6, 2015 at 1:22
413

The correct solution is to add the timezone info e.g., to get the current time as an aware datetime object in Python 3:

from datetime import datetime, timezone

now = datetime.now(timezone.utc)

On older Python versions, you could define the utc tzinfo object yourself (example from datetime docs):

from datetime import tzinfo, timedelta, datetime

ZERO = timedelta(0)

class UTC(tzinfo):
  def utcoffset(self, dt):
    return ZERO
  def tzname(self, dt):
    return "UTC"
  def dst(self, dt):
    return ZERO

utc = UTC()

then:

now = datetime.now(utc)
4
  • 23
    Better than removing the tz as the accepted answer advocates IMHO.
    – Shautieh
    Jun 1, 2017 at 5:11
  • 7
    Here is a list of python timezones: stackoverflow.com/questions/13866926/… May 9, 2018 at 10:11
  • 1
    To add a timezone to a whole Pandas column/series rather than a single item, try something like: df['time'] = df['time'].dt.tz_localize(timezone.utc)
    – Dave X
    Aug 1, 2022 at 2:14
  • @atlas_scoffed to be exact this is the list from the tz database that the third-party module pytz contains; there’s no such thing as "python timezones".
    – bfontaine
    Dec 13, 2023 at 10:09
79

I know some people use Django specifically as an interface to abstract this type of database interaction. Django provides utilities that can be used for this:

from django.utils import timezone
now_aware = timezone.now()

You do need to set up a basic Django settings infrastructure, even if you are just using this type of interface (in settings, you need to include USE_TZ=True to get an aware datetime).

By itself, this is probably nowhere near enough to motivate you to use Django as an interface, but there are many other perks. On the other hand, if you stumbled here because you were mangling your Django app (as I did), then perhaps this helps...

3
  • 2
    you need USE_TZ=True, to get an aware datetime here.
    – jfs
    Oct 4, 2015 at 7:41
  • 2
    Yes - I forgot to mention that you need to set up your settings.py as J.F.Sebastian describes (I guess this was an instance of 'set and forget').
    – sage
    Oct 4, 2015 at 22:39
  • And this can also be easily converted to other timezones, such as + timedelta(hours=5, minutes=30) for IST
    – ABcDexter
    May 10, 2020 at 11:23
47

This is a very simple and clear solution
Two lines of code

# First we obtain de timezone info o some datatime variable    

tz_info = your_timezone_aware_variable.tzinfo

# Now we can subtract two variables using the same time zone info
# For instance
# Lets obtain the Now() datetime but for the tz_info we got before

diff = datetime.datetime.now(tz_info)-your_timezone_aware_variable

Conclusion: You must mange your datetime variables with the same time info

3
  • Incorrect? The code I wrote was tested and I am using it in a django project. It's much much clear and simple
    – ePi272314
    Oct 4, 2015 at 13:47
  • the "incorrect" refers to the last sentence in your answer: "...must add ...not UTC" -- UTC timezone works here and therefore the statement is incorrect.
    – jfs
    Oct 4, 2015 at 13:53
  • 1
    to be clear I meant: diff = datetime.now(timezone.utc) - your_timezone_aware_variable works (and the (a - b) formula above is the explanation why (a - b) can work even if a.tzinfo is not b.tzinfo).
    – jfs
    Nov 7, 2016 at 14:39
26

You don't need anything outside the std libs

datetime.datetime.now().astimezone()

If you just replace the timezone it will not adjust the time. If your system is already UTC then .replace(tz='UTC') is fine.

>>> x=datetime.datetime.now()
datetime.datetime(2020, 11, 16, 7, 57, 5, 364576)

>>> print(x)
2020-11-16 07:57:05.364576

>>> print(x.astimezone()) 
2020-11-16 07:57:05.364576-07:00

>>> print(x.replace(tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc)) # wrong
2020-11-16 07:57:05.364576+00:00
13

The most straight forward answer to the question in the title seems to be missing:

naive_date.replace(tzinfo=aware_date.tzinfo) - aware_date
12

I also faced the same problem. Then I found a solution after a lot of searching.

The problem was that when we get the datetime object from model or form it is offset aware and if we get the time by system it is offset naive.

So what I did is I got the current time using timezone.now() and import the timezone by from django.utils import timezone and put the USE_TZ = True in your project settings file.

0
6

The psycopg2 module has its own timezone definitions, so I ended up writing my own wrapper around utcnow:

def pg_utcnow():
    import psycopg2
    return datetime.utcnow().replace(
        tzinfo=psycopg2.tz.FixedOffsetTimezone(offset=0, name=None))

and just use pg_utcnow whenever you need the current time to compare against a PostgreSQL timestamptz

1
  • Any tzinfo object that returns zero utc offset will do, for example.
    – jfs
    Sep 4, 2014 at 9:38
6

I came up with an ultra-simple solution:

import datetime

def calcEpochSec(dt):
    epochZero = datetime.datetime(1970,1,1,tzinfo = dt.tzinfo)
    return (dt - epochZero).total_seconds()

It works with both timezone-aware and timezone-naive datetime values. And no additional libraries or database workarounds are required.

2

I've found timezone.make_aware(datetime.datetime.now()) is helpful in django (I'm on 1.9.1). Unfortunately you can't simply make a datetime object offset-aware, then timetz() it. You have to make a datetime and make comparisons based on that.

1

I know this is old, but just thought I would add my solution just in case someone finds it useful.

I wanted to compare the local naive datetime with an aware datetime from a timeserver. I basically created a new naive datetime object using the aware datetime object. It's a bit of a hack and doesn't look very pretty but gets the job done.

import ntplib
import datetime
from datetime import timezone

def utc_to_local(utc_dt):
    return utc_dt.replace(tzinfo=timezone.utc).astimezone(tz=None)    

try:
    ntpt = ntplib.NTPClient()
    response = ntpt.request('pool.ntp.org')
    date = utc_to_local(datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(response.tx_time))
    sysdate = datetime.datetime.now()

...here comes the fudge...

    temp_date = datetime.datetime(int(str(date)[:4]),int(str(date)[5:7]),int(str(date)[8:10]),int(str(date)[11:13]),int(str(date)[14:16]),int(str(date)[17:19]))
    dt_delta = temp_date-sysdate
except Exception:
    print('Something went wrong :-(')
2
  • FYI, utc_to_local() from my answer returns local time as an aware datetime object (It is Python 3.3+ code)
    – jfs
    Sep 4, 2014 at 9:26
  • It is not clear what your code is trying to do. You could replace it with delta = response.tx_time - time.time().
    – jfs
    Sep 4, 2014 at 9:28
1

Is there some pressing reason why you can't handle the age calculation in PostgreSQL itself? Something like

select *, age(timeStampField) as timeStampAge from myTable
1
  • 3
    Yes there is.. but I was mostly asking because I want to avoid doing all the calculations in postgre.
    – Ian
    Apr 28, 2009 at 12:27

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