Python has defined a module, “time” which allows us to handle various operations regarding time, its conversions and representations, which find its use in various applications in life. The beginning of time started measuring from 1 January, 12:00 am, 1970 and this very time is termed as “epoch” in Python.
Operations on Time in Python
Python time.time() Function
Python time() function is used to count the number of seconds elapsed since the epoch.
Python3
# Python code to demonstrate the working of # time() # importing "time" module for time operations import time # using time() to display time since epoch print ( "Seconds elapsed since the epoch are : " ,end = "") print (time.time()) |
Python time.gmtime() Function
Python gmtime() function returns a structure with 9 values each representing a time attribute in sequence. It converts seconds into time attributes(days, years, months etc.) till specified seconds from the epoch. If no seconds are mentioned, time is calculated till the present. The structure attribute table is given below.
Index Attributes Values 0 tm_year 2008 1 tm_mon 1 to 12 2 tm_mday 1 to 31 3 tm_hour 0 to 23 4 tm_min 0 to 59 5 tm_sec 0 to 61 (60 or 61 are leap-seconds) 6 tm_wday 0 to 6 7 tm_yday 1 to 366 8 tm_isdst -1, 0, 1 where -1 means Library determines DST
Python3
# Python code to demonstrate the working of gmtime() import time # using gmtime() to return the time attribute structure print ( "Time calculated acc. to given seconds is : " ) print (time.gmtime()) |
Output:
Time calculated acc. to given seconds is : time.struct_time(tm_year=2016, tm_mon=8, tm_mday=2, tm_hour=7, tm_min=12, tm_sec=31, tm_wday=1, tm_yday=215, tm_isdst=0)
Python time.asctime() and time.ctime() Function
Python time.asctime() function takes a time-attributed string produced by gmtime() and returns a 24-character string denoting time.Python time.ctime() function returns a 24-character time string but takes seconds as an argument and computes time till mentioned seconds. If no argument is passed, time is calculated till the present.
Python3
# Python code to demonstrate the working of # asctime() and ctime() # importing "time" module for time operations import time # initializing time using gmtime() ti = time.gmtime() # using asctime() to display time acc. to time mentioned print ( "Time calculated using asctime() is : " ,end = "") print (time.asctime(ti)) # using ctime() to display time string using seconds print ( "Time calculated using ctime() is : " , end = "") print (time.ctime()) |
Output:
Time calculated using asctime() is : Tue Aug 2 07:47:02 2016 Time calculated using ctime() is : Tue Aug 2 07:47:02 2016
Python time.sleep() Function
This method is used to halt the program execution for the time specified in the arguments.
Python3
# Python code to demonstrate the working of # sleep() # importing "time" module for time operations import time # using ctime() to show present time print ( "Start Execution : " ,end = "") print (time.ctime()) # using sleep() to hault execution time.sleep( 4 ) # using ctime() to show present time print ( "Stop Execution : " ,end = "") print (time.ctime()) |
Output:
Start Execution : Tue Aug 2 07:59:03 2016 Stop Execution : Tue Aug 2 07:59:07 2016
Python time.mktime() Function
In this example, we have created a struct_time object with a tuple of values for each of its fields then we have passed the object to the time.mktime() to convert it to a floating-point number representing the number of seconds since the Unix epoch.
Python3
import time # Create a struct_time object representing a date and time my_time = time.strptime( "2023-05-10 14:30:00" , "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S" ) # Convert the struct_time object to a floating-point number seconds_since_epoch = time.mktime(my_time) print ( "Seconds since epoch:" , seconds_since_epoch) |
Output:
Seconds since epoch: 1683709200.0
Python time.localtime() Function
In this example, we call time.localtime() with no argument to get the current local time as a struct_time.
Python3
import time current_time = time.localtime() print (current_time) |
Output:
time.struct_time(tm_year=2023, tm_mon=5, tm_mday=10, tm_hour=12, tm_min=42, tm_sec=51, tm_wday=2, tm_yday=130, tm_isdst=0)
Python time.strftime() Function
It takes a format string as its first argument, which specifies the desired format of the output string.
Python3
import time now = time.localtime() formatted_time = time.strftime( "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S" , now) print (formatted_time) |
Output:
2023-05-10 13:42:04