Maya: Datetime for Humans™ ========================== .. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/maya.svg :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/maya .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/kennethreitz/maya.svg?branch=master :target: https://travis-ci.org/kennethreitz/maya .. image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/SayThanks.io-☼-1EAEDB.svg :target: https://saythanks.io/to/kennethreitz Datetimes are very frustrating to work with in Python, especially when dealing with different locales on different systems. This library exists to make the simple things **much** easier, while admitting that time is an illusion (timezones doubly so). Datetimes should be interacted with via an API written for humans. Maya is mostly built around the headaches and use-cases around parsing datetime data from websites. ☤ Basic Usage of Maya --------------------- Behold, datetimes for humans! .. code-block:: pycon >>> now = maya.now() >>> tomorrow = maya.when('tomorrow') >>> tomorrow.slang_date() 'tomorrow' >>> tomorrow.slang_time() '23 hours from now' >>> tomorrow.iso8601() '2016-12-16T15:11:30.263350Z' >>> tomorrow.rfc2822() 'Fri, 16 Dec 2016 20:11:30 -0000' >>> tomorrow.datetime() datetime.datetime(2016, 12, 16, 15, 11, 30, 263350, tzinfo=) # Automatically parse datetime strings and generate naive datetimes. >>> scraped = '2016-12-16 18:23:45.423992+00:00' >>> maya.parse(scraped).datetime(to_timezone='US/Eastern', naive=True) datetime.datetime(2016, 12, 16, 13, 23, 45, 423992) >>> rand_day = maya.when('2011-02-07', timezone='US/Eastern') # Note how this is the 6th, not the 7th. >>> rand_day.day 6 # Always. >>> rand_day.timezone UTC ☤ Why is this useful? --------------------- - All timezone algebra will behave identically on all machines, regardless of system locale. - Complete symmetric import and export of both ISO 8601 and RFC 2822 datetime stamps. - Fantastic parsing of both dates written for/by humans and machines (``maya.when()`` vs ``maya.parse()``). - Support for human slang, both import and export (e.g. `an hour ago`). - Datetimes can very easily be generated, with or without tzinfo attached. - This library is based around epoch time, but dates before Jan 1 1970 are indeed supported, via negative integers. - Maya never panics, and always carries a towel. ☤ What about Delorean, Arrow, & Pendulum? ----------------------------------------- Arrow, for example, is a fantastic library, but isn't what I wanted in a datetime library. In many ways, it's better than Maya for certain things. In some ways, in my opinion, it's not. I simply desire a sane API for datetimes that made sense to me for all the things I'd ever want to do—especially when dealing with timezone algebra. Arrow doesn't do all of the things I need (but it does a lot more!). Maya does do exactly what I need. I think these projects complement each-other, personally. Maya is great for parsing websites. For example- Arrow supports floors and ceilings and spans of dates, which Maya does not at all. ☤ Installing Maya ----------------- Installation is easy, with pip:: $ pip install maya ✨🍰✨ ☤ Like it? ---------- `Say Thanks `_! How to Contribute ----------------- #. Check for open issues or open a fresh issue to start a discussion around a feature idea or a bug. #. Fork `the repository`_ on GitHub to start making your changes to the **master** branch (or branch off of it). #. Write a test which shows that the bug was fixed or that the feature works as expected. #. Send a pull request and bug the maintainer until it gets merged and published. :) Make sure to add yourself to AUTHORS_. .. _`the repository`: http://github.com/kennethreitz/maya .. _AUTHORS: https://github.com/kennethreitz/maya/blob/master/AUTHORS.rst