Fwd: Timezone for datetime.date objects
Morten W. Petersen
morphex at gmail.com
Tue Mar 1 06:53:02 EST 2022
Forwarding to the list..
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Morten W. Petersen <morphex at gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Mar 1, 2022 at 12:52 PM
Subject: Re: Timezone for datetime.date objects
To: Chris Angelico <rosuav at gmail.com>
On Mon, Feb 28, 2022 at 11:57 PM Chris Angelico <rosuav at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 1 Mar 2022 at 09:28, Morten W. Petersen <morphex at gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Chris, Cameron.
> >
> > Well, let's say I specify the datetime 2022-02-22 02:02 (AM). I think
> everyone could agree that it also means 2022-02-22 02:02:00:00, to
> 2022-02-22 02:02:59:59.
> >
>
> Not sure how many :59s you want there :) I'm going to assume you mean
> "02:02:00" to "02:02:59".
>
> > And I think the same applies for a date. If the pipes are clogged and I
> can't take (give) a shit, a shower or do anything else involving fluids, I
> can just leave the keys under the doormat, and agree a date with the
> plumber, and go off to a friend of relatives' place for a couple of days
> while waiting for the plumber to do the necessary work.
> >
>
> That is one of the fundamental differences between humans and
> computers. Humans are very VERY sloppy with time descriptions. With
> computers, it's much better to be clear about time ranges; a time does
> not imply a specific window size. (And autistic humans are more like
> computers.)
>
>
Yep. Well, as I said, I could create some range objects myself, and even
create a little module and put it up on pypi, if I couldn't find any
existing module I could use.
As we're discussing this, it is clear that different points can be made,
and as for the Python standard library, it is what it is today, and part of
the reason I was posting this email was to see if it should be changed,
amended/appended to include range.
I've worked a bit with dates, date searches and so on, and having existing
range classes and objects to work with, defined in the standard library,
seems like a natural and useful thing. Time, as humans have defined it
with timezones, leap years, leap seconds, Denmark not following the atomic
clock etc. is a bit messy, and it is easy to make mistakes creating custom
code dealing with it.
Regards,
Morten
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--
I am https://leavingnorway.info
Videos at https://www.youtube.com/user/TheBlogologue
Twittering at http://twitter.com/blogologue
Blogging at http://blogologue.com
Playing music at https://soundcloud.com/morten-w-petersen
Also playing music and podcasting here:
http://www.mixcloud.com/morten-w-petersen/
On Google+ here https://plus.google.com/107781930037068750156
On Instagram at https://instagram.com/morphexx/
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