On Thu, 05 Jul 2012 11:15:04 -0700, rurpy wrote: > On Thursday, July 5, 2012 11:34:16 AM UTC-6, John Nagle wrote: >>[...] >> You can also call time.time(), and get the number of seconds >> since the epoch (usually 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC). That's just a >> number, and you can do arithmetic on that. >> >> Adding a datetime.time to a datetime.timedelta isn't that >> useful. > > It certainly is useful and I gave an obvious and real- world example in > my previous post.
Agreed. A timedelta of less than one day magnitude should be usable with time objects, and wrap around at midnight. That's a clear and useful extension to the current functionality. I can't see a feature request (rejected or otherwise) on the bug tracker. Perhaps you should raise one for Python 3.4. It will have a better chance of being accepted if you include a patch, or at least tests. http://bugs.python.org/ -- Steven -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list