Pergunta

So I have this list:

[datetime.timedelta(0, 1800), datetime.timedelta(0, 1800), datetime.timedelta(0, 1800), datetime.timedelta(0, 1800)]

Collectively that is 2:00 hours. I'm trying to add those up to get 2:00 time delta, which then in turn needs to be turned into a string of 2.0 Hours. Respectively 1:30 Hours would be 1.5 Hours as the final countdown.

Foi útil?

Solução

The naive approach would be to take the seconds from each object and sum them

>>> a = [datetime.timedelta(0, 1800)] * 4
>>> print sum([d.seconds for d in a])
7200
>>> print sum([d.seconds for d in a]) / 60.0 / 60.0
2.0

but this is not as robust as Haidro's solution:

import operator
reduce(operator.add, a)

This results in a timedelta object with the correct delta that you can use however you want.

Outras dicas

The obvious way to sum anything number-like and addable in Python is with the sum function:

>>> dts = [datetime.timedelta(0, 1800), datetime.timedelta(0, 1800), datetime.timedelta(0, 1800), datetime.timedelta(0, 1800)]
>>> sum(dts, start=datetime.timedelta(0))
datetime.timedelta(0, 9, 933279)

(For most number-like types, you don't even need the start value, because they know how to add themselves to 0. timedelta explicitly does not allow this, to avoid accidentally mixing dimensionless intervals—e.g., you don't want to add timeout_in_millis to a timedelta…)


Whenever you're using reduce with operator.add for number-like values, you're probably doing it wrong.

If you don't provide an initial argument to reduce, it will do the wrong thing with an empty list, raising a TypeError instead of returning the 0 value. (The sum of no numbers is 0; the sum of no timedeltas is timedelta(0); etc.)

And if you do provide an initial argument, then it's just a more verbose, more complicated, and slower way to write sum. Compare:

functools.reduce(operator.add, a, foo(0))
sum(a, foo(0))
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