On Wed, Apr 2, 2014 at 7:52 AM, M.-A. Lemburg <m...@egenix.com> wrote:
> >>> print now() + RelativeDateTime(months=+1, day=1)
> 2014-05-01 14:49:05.83

I find this sort date arithmetic unintuitive, though I'm at a loss to
come up with better logic than you have:

>>> d = Date(2014, 2, 28)
>>> d + RelativeDateTime(months=+1)
<mx.DateTime.DateTime object for '2014-03-28 00:00:00.00' at 1eda8c8>
>>> d = Date(2014, 1, 31)
>>> d + RelativeDateTime(months=+1)
<mx.DateTime.DateTime object for '2014-03-03 00:00:00.00' at 1eda870>

I guess the assumption is that one month is the length in days of the
current month, though, you wind up with situations where shorter
months can be skipped altogether. Is there a way to talk in terms of
"months" but not have short months get skipped?

Thx,

Skip
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