A backport of Python 3.11's datetime.fromisoformat
methods to earlier versions of Python 3.
Tested against Python 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10 and 3.11
Development of backports.datetime_fromisoformat
is "complete". Outside of potential minor bug fixes, do not expect new development here.
In version 1, backports.datetime_fromisoformat
was a backport of the Python 3.7 version of the fromisoformat
methods.
This meant that it was limited in being able to parse only timestamps that were in the format produced by datetime.isoformat
.
As of version 2, backports.datetime_fromisoformat
is a backport of the Python 3.11 version of the fromisoformat
methods, which can parse (almost) the entire ISO 8601 specification.
There are no changes required when upgrading from v1 to v2. The parser is simply able to parse a wider portion of the ISO 8601 specification.
However, starting in version 2, backports.datetime_fromisoformat
will apply its changes to Python < 3.11, whereas v1 only applied changes to Python < 3.7.
If you happened to be using backports.datetime_fromisoformat
v1 on Python 3.7 through Python 3.10 and then upgrade to v2, it will patch the fromisoformat
methods, whereas in v1 it did not.
The result is that the fromisoformat
methods will suddenly be able to parse timestamps from a wider portion of the ISO 8601 specification.
Installation:
pip install "backports-datetime-fromisoformat; python_version < '3.11'"
Usage:
>>> from datetime import date, datetime, time
>>> from backports.datetime_fromisoformat import MonkeyPatch
>>> MonkeyPatch.patch_fromisoformat()
>>> datetime.fromisoformat("2014-01-09T21:48:00-05:30")
datetime.datetime(2014, 1, 9, 21, 48, tzinfo=-05:30)
>>> date.fromisoformat("2014-01-09")
datetime.date(2014, 1, 9)
>>> time.fromisoformat("21:48:00-05:30")
datetime.time(21, 48, tzinfo=-05:30)
In Python 3.7, datetime.fromisoformat was added. It is the inverse of datetime.isoformat.
Similar methods were added to the date
and time
types as well.
In Python 3.11, datetime.fromisoformat was extended to cover (almost) all of the ISO 8601 specification, making it generally useful.
For those who need to support earlier versions of Python, a backport of these methods was needed.
backports.datetime_fromisoformat
is a C implementation of fromisoformat
based on the upstream cPython 3.11 code.
For timezone objects, it uses a custom timezone
C implementation (originally from Pendulum).
NOTE: in Python 3.11 and later, compatible versions of fromisoformat
methods exist in the stdlib, and installing this package has NO EFFECT.
The purpose of this project is to provide a perfect backport of the fromisoformat
methods to earlier versions of Python, while still providing comparable performance.