Currently one can do week = d.isocalendar()[1] The iso definition of a week number has some nice properties.
robertvandeneynde.be On Fri, 1 Mar 2019, 11:44 Antonio Galán, <angala....@gmail.com> wrote: > The week number is usually refered to the week of the year, but the week > of the month is also interesting, for example for some holiday which depend > on the week number of the month, so in analogy with "weekday" we can use > "yearweek" and "monthweek" > El vie., 1 de marzo de 2019 9:33, Adrien Ricocotam <ricoco...@gmail.com> > escribió: > >> I like the idea. But how to distinguish it from the number of week past >> since the beginning of the month ? >> >> But that’s great. >> >> On Fri 1 Mar 2019 at 09:31, Antonio Galán <angala....@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> Hi, datetime.date.today() (or other day) has attributes .year and >>> .month wich return the year and the month of that date, also it has a >>> function weekday() wich return the number of the day in the week. >>> >>> I think it is a good idea add a function or attribute "week" wich return >>> the number of the week on the year. It is useful to execute scripts once a >>> week for example. >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Python-ideas mailing list >>> Python-ideas@python.org >>> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-ideas >>> Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/ >>> >> _______________________________________________ > Python-ideas mailing list > Python-ideas@python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-ideas > Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/ >
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