Why does creating a datetime with a tzinfo from pytz show a weird time offset?

烂漫一生 提交于 2019-12-07 04:10:20

问题


Can someone explain me why I do not get the same result in those?

import datetime,pytz
var1 = datetime.datetime(2017,10,25,20,10,50,tzinfo=pytz.timezone("Europe/Athens")))
print(var1)

The output of this code is: 2017-10-25 20:10:50+01:35

import datetime,pytz
var1 = datetime.datetime(2017,10,25,20,10,50)
var1 = pytz.timezone("Europe/Athens").localize(var1)
print(var1)

The output of this code is: 2017-10-25 20:10:50+03:00

My question is why they have different timezones (1:35 and 3:00). I know that the second code is true because my UTC is 3:00. But can you tell me why I am getting 1:35 in the first one?


回答1:


There is no problem, datetime just happily reports the offset of the tzinfo in whatever reference frame.

By default pytz.timezone doesn't give the UTC offset but the LMT (local mean time) offset:

>>> pytz.timezone("Europe/Athens")
<DstTzInfo 'Europe/Athens' LMT+1:35:00 STD>
#                          ^^^-------------------- local mean time

However when you localize it:

>>> var1 = datetime.datetime(2017,10,25,20,10,50)
>>> var1 = pytz.timezone("Europe/Athens").localize(var1)
>>> var1.tzinfo
<DstTzInfo 'Europe/Athens' EEST+3:00:00 DST>
#                          ^^^^-------------------- eastern european summer time

A different offset is now reported, this time based on the EEST.




回答2:


tzinfo doesn't work well for some timezones and that could be the reason for the wrong result.
pytz doc:

Unfortunately using the tzinfo argument of the standard datetime constructors ‘’does not work’’ with pytz for many timezones.

Using localize or astimezone is a fix to this problem. Doc says that The preferred way of dealing with times is to always work in UTC, converting to localtime only when generating output to be read by humans.

import datetime, pytz
localTimezone = pytz.timezone('Europe/Athens')
var1 = datetime.datetime(2017,10,25,20,10,50,tzinfo=pytz.utc) 
loc_dt = var1.astimezone(localTimezone)
fmt = '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %Z%z'
print(loc_dt.strftime(fmt))  

This will print

2017-10-25 23:10:50 EEST+0300



回答3:


In the second code, you use .localize(), which takes a naive datetime object and interprets it as if it is in that timezone. It does not move the time to another timezone. A naive datetime object has no timezone information to be able to make that move possible.

As you are making the time local in the second code, the time shown in the second one is correct. As you are not making the time local in the first code, the time shown is incorrect.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45755336/why-does-creating-a-datetime-with-a-tzinfo-from-pytz-show-a-weird-time-offset

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!