How do I get the current time in Python?
We can get the current time using the now
method in Python’s built-in datetime
library. For example:
from datetime import datetime current_time = datetime.now()
current_time
will contain a datetime
object containing the date and time values for the instant at which the function was called. This can be accessed and displayed in a number of different ways:
print(current_time) # will print the full date and time print(current_time.time()) # will print the time of day only print(current_time.date()) # will print the calendar date only
Note that the datetime
object stored in current_time
is not aware of time zones. To get the current time for a specific time zone, we must incorporate pytz
into our code:
from datetime import datetime import pytz current_time = datetime.now(pytz.timezone('US/Pacific')) print(current_time) # will print the full date and time with time zone offset from UTC print(current_time.time()) # will print the time of day only print(current_time.date()) # will print the calendar date only print(current_time.utcoffset()) # will print the offset from UTC time
Alternatively, if we want to work with Unix time rather than datetime objects, we can use Python’s time
module. The current Unix time is returned by time.time()
:
import time print(time.time()) # will print the current Unix time as a floating point number
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