dateparser provides modules to easily parse localized dates in almost any string formats commonly found on web pages.
Documentation can be found here.
- Generic parsing of dates in English, Spanish, Dutch, Russian and several other languages and formats.
- Generic parsing of relative dates like:
'1 min ago'
,'2 weeks ago'
,'3 months, 1 week and 1 day ago'
. - Generic parsing of dates with time zones abbreviations or UTC offsets like:
'August 14, 2015 EST'
,'July 4, 2013 PST'
,'21 July 2013 10:15 pm +0500'
. - Support for non-Gregorian calendar systems with the first addition of :class:`JalaliParser <dateparser.calendars.jalali.JalaliParser>`. See Persian Jalali Calendar for more information.
- Extensive test coverage.
The most straightforward way is to use the dateparser.parse function, that wraps around most of the functionality in the module.
.. automodule:: dateparser :members: parse
>>> import dateparser >>> dateparser.parse('12/12/12') datetime.datetime(2012, 12, 12, 0, 0) >>> dateparser.parse(u'Fri, 12 Dec 2014 10:55:50') datetime.datetime(2014, 12, 12, 10, 55, 50) >>> dateparser.parse(u'Martes 21 de Octubre de 2014') # Spanish (Tuesday 21 October 2014) datetime.datetime(2014, 10, 21, 0, 0) >>> dateparser.parse(u'Le 11 Décembre 2014 à 09:00') # French (11 December 2014 at 09:00) datetime.datetime(2014, 12, 11, 9, 0) >>> dateparser.parse(u'13 января 2015 г. в 13:34') # Russian (13 January 2015 at 13:34) datetime.datetime(2015, 1, 13, 13, 34) >>> dateparser.parse(u'1 เดือนตุลาคม 2005, 1:00 AM') # Thai (1 October 2005, 1:00 AM) datetime.datetime(2005, 10, 1, 1, 0)
This will try to parse a date from the given string, attempting to detect the language each time.
You can specify the language(s), if known, using languages
argument. In this case, given languages are used and language detection is skipped:
>>> dateparser.parse('2015, Ago 15, 1:08 pm', languages=['pt', 'es']) datetime.datetime(2015, 8, 15, 13, 8)
If you know the possible formats of the dates, you can
use the date_formats
argument:
>>> dateparser.parse(u'22 Décembre 2010', date_formats=['%d %B %Y']) datetime.datetime(2010, 12, 22, 0, 0)
>>> parse('1 hour ago') datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 23, 0) >>> parse(u'Il ya 2 heures') # French (2 hours ago) datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 22, 0) >>> parse(u'1 anno 2 mesi') # Italian (1 year 2 months) datetime.datetime(2014, 4, 1, 0, 0) >>> parse(u'yaklaşık 23 saat önce') # Turkish (23 hours ago) datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 1, 0) >>> parse(u'Hace una semana') # Spanish (a week ago) datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 25, 0, 0) >>> parse(u'2小时前') # Chinese (2 hours ago) datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 22, 0)
Note
Testing above code might return different values for you depending on your environment's current date and time.
dateparser translates non-English dates to English and uses dateutil module parser
to parse the translated date.
Also, it requires PyYAML for its language detection module to work. The module jdatetime is used for handling Jalali calendar.
- Arabic
- Belarusian
- Chinese
- Czech
- Dutch
- English
- Filipino
- French
- German
- Indonesian
- Italian
- Persian
- Polish
- Portuguese
- Romanian
- Russian
- Spanish
- Thai
- Turkish
- Ukrainian
- Vietnamese
- Gregorian calendar
- Persian Jalali calendar
>>> from dateparser.calendars.jalali import JalaliParser >>> JalaliParser(u'جمعه سی ام اسفند ۱۳۸۷').get_date() datetime.datetime(2009, 3, 20, 0, 0)