James thanks. I have been reviewing the Python docs but there are too
many moving parts for me at this point. I assume this can be
accomplished within the feeds.py module fairly simply but I am just
beginning to learn the code. I will give it a shot once I have a bit
more experience with it.

Damon

On Dec 23, 2:25 pm, "James Bennett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 23, 2007 11:06 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Using modified_parsed gave me this date (2007, 12, 21, 21, 22, 49, 4,
> > 355, 0)  but threw an error when applying a filter: AttributeError
> > at / 'time.struct_time' object has no attribute 'year'
>
> > I think I am just not familiar enough with Django's handling of
> > datetime to see what I am missing here.
>
> This isn't a Django thing, it's a Python thing. Unless and until you
> have something of type 'datetime.date' or 'datetime.datetime', you're
> not going to be able to treat it like you do. The feed parser is
> giving you a nine-element time tuple because that's a nice baseline
> for a Python object representation -- you can feed it into all sorts
> of other standard things to get other types of objects or do other
> sorts of calculations. So go have a look at that tuple, and at the
> docs for Python's standard 'datetime' and 'time' modules, and you
> should get a feel for what you can do with it.
>
> --
> "Bureaucrat Conrad, you are technically correct -- the best kind of correct."
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