Format timedelta to string
>>> str(datetime.timedelta(hours=10.56))
10:33:36
>>> td = datetime.timedelta(hours=10.505) # any timedelta object
>>> ':'.join(str(td).split(':')[:2])
10:30
Passing the timedelta
object to the str()
function calls the same formatting code used if we simply type print td
. Since you don't want the seconds, we can split the string by colons (3 parts) and put it back together with only the first 2 parts.
You can just convert the timedelta to a string with str(). Here's an example:
import datetime
start = datetime.datetime(2009,2,10,14,00)
end = datetime.datetime(2009,2,10,16,00)
delta = end-start
print(str(delta))
# prints 2:00:00
As you know, you can get the total_seconds from a timedelta object by accessing the .seconds
attribute.
Python provides the builtin function divmod()
which allows for:
s = 13420
hours, remainder = divmod(s, 3600)
minutes, seconds = divmod(remainder, 60)
print '{:02}:{:02}:{:02}'.format(int(hours), int(minutes), int(seconds))
# result: 03:43:40
or you can convert to hours and remainder by using a combination of modulo and subtraction:
# arbitrary number of seconds
s = 13420
# hours
hours = s // 3600
# remaining seconds
s = s - (hours * 3600)
# minutes
minutes = s // 60
# remaining seconds
seconds = s - (minutes * 60)
# total time
print '{:02}:{:02}:{:02}'.format(int(hours), int(minutes), int(seconds))
# result: 03:43:40
def td_format(td_object):
seconds = int(td_object.total_seconds())
periods = [
('year', 60*60*24*365),
('month', 60*60*24*30),
('day', 60*60*24),
('hour', 60*60),
('minute', 60),
('second', 1)
]
strings=[]
for period_name, period_seconds in periods:
if seconds > period_seconds:
period_value , seconds = divmod(seconds, period_seconds)
has_s = 's' if period_value > 1 else ''
strings.append("%s %s%s" % (period_value, period_name, has_s))
return ", ".join(strings)