IIRC, arrow usually calls dateutil to parse dates anyway, and there are many other, lighter dependencies that will parse an ISO 8601 date quickly into a datetime.datetime object. I still think it's reasonable for the .isoformat() operation to have an inverse operation in the standard library. On November 28, 2017 3:45:41 PM EST, Skip Montanaro <skip.montanaro at gmail.com> wrote: >> I think the latest version can now strptime offsets of the form >±HH:MM with >> %z, so there's no longer anything blocking you from parsing from all >> isoformat() outputs with strptime, provided you know which one you >need. > >Or just punt and install arrow: > >>>> import arrow >>>> arrow.get('2017-10-20T08:20:08.986166+00:00') ><Arrow [2017-10-20T08:20:08.986166+00:00]> >>>> arrow.get('2017-10-20T08:20:08.986166+00:00').datetime >datetime.datetime(2017, 10, 20, 8, 20, 8, 986166, tzinfo=tzoffset(None, >0)) > >Skip -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/attachments/20171128/6fa7c52d/attachment.html>
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