619
votes

Does time.time() in the Python time module return the system's time or the time in UTC?

9
Timestamps don't have timezones. They represent a number of seconds since the epoch. The epoch is a specific moment in time which doesn't depend on the timezone.jwg
@jwg: the commonly used POSIX timestamps do not count leap seconds and therefore they are not the "number of [elapsed SI] seconds since the epoch" (they are close).jfs
I don't think this is an accurate objection @J.F.Sebastian. Leap seconds are not 'elapsed seconds since the epoch'. They are changes in the time representations recorded by clocks which do not correspond to elapsed seconds.jwg
@J.F.Sebastian Sorry for the confusion. Leap seconds are not 'elapsed seconds'. Therefore timestamps, which are 'numbers of elapsed seconds', do not and should not include leap seconds.jwg
@jwg wrong. You can't erase physical time. POSIX timestamp is not the number of elapsed SI seconds. Here's an example: 3 seconds elapsed between "December 31, 2016 at 6:59:59pm" and "December 31, 2016 at 7:00:01pm" in New York but the difference in the corresponding POSIX timestamps is only 2 seconds (the leap second is not counted).jfs

9 Answers

848
votes

The time.time() function returns the number of seconds since the epoch, as seconds. Note that the "epoch" is defined as the start of January 1st, 1970 in UTC. So the epoch is defined in terms of UTC and establishes a global moment in time. No matter where you are "seconds past epoch" (time.time()) returns the same value at the same moment.

Here is some sample output I ran on my computer, converting it to a string as well.

Python 2.7.3 (default, Apr 24 2012, 00:00:54) 
[GCC 4.7.0 20120414 (prerelease)] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import time
>>> ts = time.time()
>>> print ts
1355563265.81
>>> import datetime
>>> st = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(ts).strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')
>>> print st
2012-12-15 01:21:05
>>>

The ts variable is the time returned in seconds. I then converted it to a string using the datetime library making it a string that is human readable.

324
votes

This is for the text form of a timestamp that can be used in your text files. (The title of the question was different in the past, so the introduction to this answer was changed to clarify how it could be interpreted as the time. [updated 2016-01-14])

You can get the timestamp as a string using the .now() or .utcnow() of the datetime.datetime:

>>> import datetime
>>> print datetime.datetime.utcnow()
2012-12-15 10:14:51.898000

The now differs from utcnow as expected -- otherwise they work the same way:

>>> print datetime.datetime.now()
2012-12-15 11:15:09.205000

You can render the timestamp to the string explicitly:

>>> str(datetime.datetime.now())
'2012-12-15 11:15:24.984000'

Or you can be even more explicit to format the timestamp the way you like:

>>> datetime.datetime.now().strftime("%A, %d. %B %Y %I:%M%p")
'Saturday, 15. December 2012 11:19AM'

If you want the ISO format, use the .isoformat() method of the object:

>>> datetime.datetime.now().isoformat()
'2013-11-18T08:18:31.809000'

You can use these in variables for calculations and printing without conversions.

>>> ts = datetime.datetime.now()
>>> tf = datetime.datetime.now()
>>> te = tf - ts
>>> print ts
2015-04-21 12:02:19.209915
>>> print tf
2015-04-21 12:02:30.449895
>>> print te
0:00:11.239980
148
votes

Based on the answer from #squiguy, to get a true timestamp I would type cast it from float.

>>> import time
>>> ts = int(time.time())
>>> print(ts)
1389177318

At least that's the concept.

31
votes

The answer could be neither or both.

  • neither: time.time() returns approximately the number of seconds elapsed since the Epoch. The result doesn't depend on timezone so it is neither UTC nor local time. Here's POSIX defintion for "Seconds Since the Epoch".

  • both: time.time() doesn't require your system's clock to be synchronized so it reflects its value (though it has nothing to do with local timezone). Different computers may get different results at the same time. On the other hand if your computer time is synchronized then it is easy to get UTC time from the timestamp (if we ignore leap seconds):

    from datetime import datetime
    
    utc_dt = datetime.utcfromtimestamp(timestamp)
    

On how to get timestamps from UTC time in various Python versions, see How can I get a date converted to seconds since epoch according to UTC?

4
votes

I eventually settled for:

>>> import time
>>> time.mktime(time.gmtime())
1509467455.0
3
votes

There is no such thing as an "epoch" in a specific timezone. The epoch is well-defined as a specific moment in time, so if you change the timezone, the time itself changes as well. Specifically, this time is Jan 1 1970 00:00:00 UTC. So time.time() returns the number of seconds since the epoch.

3
votes

timestamp is always time in utc, but when you call datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp it returns you time in your local timezone corresponding to this timestamp, so result depend of your locale.

>>> import time, datetime

>>> time.time()
1564494136.0434234

>>> datetime.datetime.now()
datetime.datetime(2019, 7, 30, 16, 42, 3, 899179)
>>> datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(time.time())
datetime.datetime(2019, 7, 30, 16, 43, 12, 4610)

There exist nice library arrow with different behaviour. In same case it returns you time object with UTC timezone.

>>> import arrow
>>> arrow.now()
<Arrow [2019-07-30T16:43:27.868760+03:00]>
>>> arrow.get(time.time())
<Arrow [2019-07-30T13:43:56.565342+00:00]>
3
votes

To get a local timestamp using datetime library, Python 3.x

#wanted format: year-month-day hour:minute:seconds

from datetime import datetime

# get time now
dt = datetime.now()
# format it to a string
timeStamp = dt.strftime('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')

# print it to screen
print(timeStamp)
0
votes

time.time() return the unix timestamp. you could use datetime library to get local time or UTC time.

import datetime

local_time = datetime.datetime.now()
print(local_time.strftime('%Y%m%d %H%M%S'))

utc_time = datetime.datetime.utcnow() 
print(utc_time.strftime('%Y%m%d %H%M%S'))