Oops. That isn't the TOTAL microseconds, but just the microseconds portion. Sorry for the confusion. On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 9:23 PM Henry Chen <tahafut at gmail.com> wrote: > Looks like timedelta has a microseconds property. Would this work for your > needs? > > In [12]: d > Out[12]: datetime.timedelta(0, 3, 398407) > > In [13]: d.microseconds > Out[13]: 398407 > > On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 9:08 PM Richard Belleville via Python-Dev < > python-dev at python.org> wrote: > >> In a recent code review, the following snippet was called out as >> reinventing the >> wheel: >> >> _MICROSECONDS_PER_SECOND = 1000000 >> >> >> def _timedelta_to_microseconds(delta): >> return int(delta.total_seconds() * _MICROSECONDS_PER_SECOND) >> >> >> The reviewer thought that there must already exist a standard library >> function >> that fulfills this functionality. After we had both satisfied ourselves >> that we >> hadn't simply missed something in the documentation, we decided that we >> had >> better raise the issue with a wider audience. >> >> Does this functionality already exist within the standard library? If >> not, would >> a datetime.timedelta.total_microseconds function be a reasonable >> addition? I >> would be happy to submit a patch for such a thing. >> >> Richard Belleville >> _______________________________________________ >> Python-Dev mailing list >> Python-Dev at python.org >> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev >> Unsubscribe: >> https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/tahafut%40gmail.com >> > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/attachments/20190213/fef34745/attachment.html>
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