datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp()
is correct, except you are probably having timestamp in miliseconds (like in JavaScript), but fromtimestamp()
expects Unix timestamp, in seconds.
Do it like that:
>>> import datetime
>>> your_timestamp = 1331856000000
>>> date = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(your_timestamp / 1e3)
and the result is:
>>> date
datetime.datetime(2012, 3, 16, 1, 0)
Does it answer your question?
EDIT: J.F. Sebastian correctly suggested to use true division by 1e3
(float 1000
). The difference is significant, if you would like to get precise results, thus I changed my answer. The difference results from the default behaviour of Python 2.x, which always returns int
when dividing (using /
operator) int
by int
(this is called floor division). By replacing the divisor 1000
(being an int
) with the 1e3
divisor (being representation of 1000
as float) or with float(1000)
(or 1000.
etc.), the division becomes true division. Python 2.x returns float
when dividing int
by float
, float
by int
, float
by float
etc. And when there is some fractional part in the timestamp passed to fromtimestamp()
method, this method's result also contains information about that fractional part (as the number of microseconds).