Issue
I would like a python datetime object to output (and use the result in django) like this:
Thu the 2nd at 4:30
But I find no way in python to output st
, nd
, rd
, or th
like I can with PHP datetime format with the S
string (What they call "English Ordinal Suffix") (http://uk.php.net/manual/en/function.date.php).
Is there a built-in way to do this in django/python? strftime
isn't good enough (http://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#strftime-strptime-behavior).
Django has a filter which does what I want, but I want a function, not a filter, to do what I want. Either a django or python function will be fine.
Solution
The django.utils.dateformat has a function format
that takes two arguments, the first one being the date (a datetime.date
[[or datetime.datetime
]] instance, where datetime
is the module in Python's standard library), the second one being the format string, and returns the resulting formatted string. The uppercase-S
format item (if part of the format string, of course) is the one that expands to the proper one of 'st', 'nd', 'rd' or 'th', depending on the day-of-month of the date in question.
Answered By - Alex Martelli
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