En Tue, 16 Mar 2010 20:31:11 -0300, Josh English
<joshua.r.engl...@gmail.com> escribió:
On Mar 16, 11:56 am, Jordan Apgar <twistedphr...@gmail.com> wrote:
here's what I'm doing:
date = "2010-03-16 14:46:38.409137"
olddate = datetime.strptime(date,"%Y-%m-%j %H:%M:%S.%f")
Due to circumstances, I'm using Python 2.5.4 on one machine (2.6 on
the other).
When I have a script as simple as this:
import datetime
datetime.datetime.strptime('2010-09-14', "%Y-%m-%d")
Running this script brings up a calendar, believe it or not. The
calendar displays March 2010, and shows the 22nd as a holiday. When I
dismiss the dialog box I get:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "strptimetest.py", line 3, in <module>
datetime.datetime.strptime('2010-09-14', "%Y-%m-%d")
File "C:\Python25\lib\_strptime.py", line 272, in <module>
_TimeRE_cache = TimeRE()
File "C:\Python25\lib\_strptime.py", line 191, in __init__
self.locale_time = LocaleTime()
File "C:\Python25\lib\_strptime.py", line 74, in __init__
self.__calc_weekday()
File "C:\Python25\lib\_strptime.py", line 94, in __calc_weekday
a_weekday = [calendar.day_abbr[i].lower() for i in range(7)]
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'day_abbr'
I'd say you have a calendar.py script somewhere along your sys.path, that
shadows the calendar module in the standard library.
--
Gabriel Genellina
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