Here are two approaches you could use:
>>> import datetime
>>> dtnow = datetime.datetime.now();dtutcnow = datetime.datetime.utcnow()
>>> dtnow
datetime.datetime(2013, 11, 12, 9, 10, 48, 404000)
>>> dtutcnow
datetime.datetime(2013, 11, 12, 15, 10, 48, 404000)
>>> delta = dtnow - dtutcnow
>>> delta
datetime.timedelta(-1, 64800)
>>> hh,mm = divmod((delta.days * 24*60*60 + delta.seconds + 30) // 60, 60)
>>> hh,mm
(-6, 0)
>>> "%s%+02d:%02d" % (dtnow.isoformat(), hh, mm)
'2013-11-12T09:10:48.404000-6:00'
Or this:
>>> import datetime, pytz # 3rd Party
>>> datetime.datetime.now(pytz.timezone('US/Central')).strftime('%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f%z')
'2013-11-12T09:15:20.688000-0600'
>>>
The main advantage of the second method is it makes your time string 'timezone aware'. From the docs:
There are two kinds of date and time objects: “naive” and “aware”.
This distinction refers to whether the object has any notion of time
zone, daylight saving time, or other kind of algorithmic or political
time adjustment. Whether a naive datetime object represents
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), local time, or time in some other
timezone is purely up to the program, just like it’s up to the program
whether a particular number represents metres, miles, or mass. Naive
datetime objects are easy to understand and to work with, at the cost
of ignoring some aspects of reality.
Hope this helps!
parse
function from? – Flap