jupyter date string format code example

Example: jupyter date string format

print(today().strftime("%d %B %Y")) #05 March 2021

# Date/Time Formatting Options:      
%a: Returns the first three characters of the weekday, e.g. Wed.
%A: Returns the full name of the weekday, e.g. Wednesday.
%B: Returns the full name of the month, e.g. September.
%w: Returns the weekday as a number, from 0 to 6, with Sunday being 0.
%m: Returns the month as a number, from 01 to 12.
%p: Returns AM/PM for time.
%y: Returns the year in two-digit format, that is, without the century. For example, "18" instead of "2018".
%f: Returns microsecond from 000000 to 999999.
%Z: Returns the timezone.
%z: Returns UTC offset.
%j: Returns the number of the day in the year, from 001 to 366.
%W: Returns the week number of the year, from 00 to 53, with Monday being counted as the first day of the week.
%U: Returns the week number of the year, from 00 to 53, with Sunday counted as the first day of each week.
%c: Returns the local date and time version.
%x: Returns the local version of date.
%X: Returns the local version of time.