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Date parsing library designed to parse dates from HTML pages

Project description

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dateparser provides modules to easily parse localized dates in almost any string formats commonly found on web pages.

Documentation

Documentation is built automatically and can be found on Read the Docs.

Features

  • Generic parsing of dates in over 200 language locales plus numerous formats in a language agnostic fashion.

  • Generic parsing of relative dates like: '1 min ago', '2 weeks ago', '3 months, 1 week and 1 day ago', 'in 2 days', 'tomorrow'.

  • Generic parsing of dates with time zones abbreviations or UTC offsets like: 'August 14, 2015 EST', 'July 4, 2013 PST', '21 July 2013 10:15 pm +0500'.

  • Date lookup in longer texts.

  • Support for non-Gregorian calendar systems. See Supported Calendars.

  • Extensive test coverage.

Usage

The most straightforward way is to use the dateparser.parse function, that wraps around most of the functionality in the module.

Relative Dates

>>> parse('1 hour ago')
datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 23, 0)
>>> parse(u'Il ya 2 heures')  # French (2 hours ago)
datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 22, 0)
>>> parse(u'1 anno 2 mesi')  # Italian (1 year 2 months)
datetime.datetime(2014, 4, 1, 0, 0)
>>> parse(u'yaklaşık 23 saat önce')  # Turkish (23 hours ago)
datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 1, 0)
>>> parse(u'Hace una semana')  # Spanish (a week ago)
datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 25, 0, 0)
>>> parse(u'2小时前')  # Chinese (2 hours ago)
datetime.datetime(2015, 5, 31, 22, 0)

OOTB Language Based Date Order Preference

>>> # parsing ambiguous date
>>> parse('02-03-2016')  # assumes english language, uses MDY date order
datetime.datetime(2016, 2, 3, 0, 0)
>>> parse('le 02-03-2016')  # detects french, uses DMY date order
datetime.datetime(2016, 3, 2, 0, 0)

For more on date order, please look at Settings.

Timezone and UTC Offset

By default, dateparser returns tzaware datetime if timezone is present in date string. Otherwise, it returns a naive datetime object.

>>> parse('January 12, 2012 10:00 PM EST')
datetime.datetime(2012, 1, 12, 22, 0, tzinfo=<StaticTzInfo 'EST'>)
>>> parse('January 12, 2012 10:00 PM -0500')
datetime.datetime(2012, 1, 12, 22, 0, tzinfo=<StaticTzInfo 'UTC\-05:00'>)
>>> parse('2 hours ago EST')
datetime.datetime(2017, 3, 10, 15, 55, 39, 579667, tzinfo=<StaticTzInfo 'EST'>)
>>> parse('2 hours ago -0500')
datetime.datetime(2017, 3, 10, 15, 59, 30, 193431, tzinfo=<StaticTzInfo 'UTC\-05:00'>)

If date has no timezone name/abbreviation or offset, you can specify it using TIMEZONE setting.

>>> parse('January 12, 2012 10:00 PM', settings={'TIMEZONE': 'US/Eastern'})
datetime.datetime(2012, 1, 12, 22, 0)
>>> parse('January 12, 2012 10:00 PM', settings={'TIMEZONE': '+0500'})
datetime.datetime(2012, 1, 12, 22, 0)

TIMEZONE option may not be useful alone as it only attaches given timezone to resultant datetime object. But can be useful in cases where you want conversions from and to different timezones or when simply want a tzaware date with given timezone info attached.

>>> parse('January 12, 2012 10:00 PM', settings={'TIMEZONE': 'US/Eastern', 'RETURN_AS_TIMEZONE_AWARE': True})
datetime.datetime(2012, 1, 12, 22, 0, tzinfo=<DstTzInfo 'US/Eastern' EST-1 day, 19:00:00 STD>)
>>> parse('10:00 am', settings={'TIMEZONE': 'EST', 'TO_TIMEZONE': 'EDT'})
datetime.datetime(2016, 9, 25, 11, 0)

Some more use cases for conversion of timezones.

>>> parse('10:00 am EST', settings={'TO_TIMEZONE': 'EDT'})  # date string has timezone info
datetime.datetime(2017, 3, 12, 11, 0, tzinfo=<StaticTzInfo 'EDT'>)
>>> parse('now EST', settings={'TO_TIMEZONE': 'UTC'})  # relative dates
datetime.datetime(2017, 3, 10, 23, 24, 47, 371823, tzinfo=<StaticTzInfo 'UTC'>)

In case, no timezone is present in date string or defined in settings. You can still return tzaware datetime. It is especially useful in case of relative dates when uncertain what timezone is relative base.

>>> parse('2 minutes ago', settings={'RETURN_AS_TIMEZONE_AWARE': True})
datetime.datetime(2017, 3, 11, 4, 25, 24, 152670, tzinfo=<DstTzInfo 'Asia/Karachi' PKT+5:00:00 STD>)

In case, you want to compute relative dates in UTC instead of default system’s local timezone, you can use TIMEZONE setting.

>>> parse('4 minutes ago', settings={'TIMEZONE': 'UTC'})
datetime.datetime(2017, 3, 10, 23, 27, 59, 647248, tzinfo=<StaticTzInfo 'UTC'>)

For more on timezones, please look at Settings.

Incomplete Dates

>>> from dateparser import parse
>>> parse(u'December 2015')  # default behavior
datetime.datetime(2015, 12, 16, 0, 0)
>>> parse(u'December 2015', settings={'PREFER_DAY_OF_MONTH': 'last'})
datetime.datetime(2015, 12, 31, 0, 0)
>>> parse(u'December 2015', settings={'PREFER_DAY_OF_MONTH': 'first'})
datetime.datetime(2015, 12, 1, 0, 0)
>>> parse(u'March')
datetime.datetime(2015, 3, 16, 0, 0)
>>> parse(u'March', settings={'PREFER_DATES_FROM': 'future'})
datetime.datetime(2016, 3, 16, 0, 0)
>>> # parsing with preference set for 'past'
>>> parse('August', settings={'PREFER_DATES_FROM': 'past'})
datetime.datetime(2015, 8, 15, 0, 0)

You can also ignore parsing incomplete dates altogether by setting STRICT_PARSING flag as follows:

>>> parse(u'December 2015', settings={'STRICT_PARSING': True})
None

For more on handling incomplete dates, please look at Settings.

Search for Dates in Longer Chunks of Text

You can extract dates from longer strings of text. They are returned as list of tuples with text chunk containing the date and parsed datetime object.

Dependencies

dateparser relies on following libraries in some ways:

  • dateutil’s module relativedelta for its freshness parser.

  • jdatetime to convert Jalali dates to Gregorian.

  • umalqurra to convert Hijri dates to Gregorian.

  • tzlocal to reliably get local timezone.

  • ruamel.yaml (optional) for operations on language files.

Supported languages and locales

Language

Locales

en

‘en-001’, ‘en-150’, ‘en-AG’, ‘en-AI’, ‘en-AS’, ‘en-AT’, ‘en-AU’, ‘en-BB’, ‘en-BE’, ‘en-BI’, ‘en-BM’, ‘en-BS’, ‘en-BW’, ‘en-BZ’, ‘en-CA’, ‘en-CC’, ‘en-CH’, ‘en-CK’, ‘en-CM’, ‘en-CX’, ‘en-CY’, ‘en-DE’, ‘en-DG’, ‘en-DK’, ‘en-DM’, ‘en-ER’, ‘en-FI’, ‘en-FJ’, ‘en-FK’, ‘en-FM’, ‘en-GB’, ‘en-GD’, ‘en-GG’, ‘en-GH’, ‘en-GI’, ‘en-GM’, ‘en-GU’, ‘en-GY’, ‘en-HK’, ‘en-IE’, ‘en-IL’, ‘en-IM’, ‘en-IN’, ‘en-IO’, ‘en-JE’, ‘en-JM’, ‘en-KE’, ‘en-KI’, ‘en-KN’, ‘en-KY’, ‘en-LC’, ‘en-LR’, ‘en-LS’, ‘en-MG’, ‘en-MH’, ‘en-MO’, ‘en-MP’, ‘en-MS’, ‘en-MT’, ‘en-MU’, ‘en-MW’, ‘en-MY’, ‘en-NA’, ‘en-NF’, ‘en-NG’, ‘en-NL’, ‘en-NR’, ‘en-NU’, ‘en-NZ’, ‘en-PG’, ‘en-PH’, ‘en-PK’, ‘en-PN’, ‘en-PR’, ‘en-PW’, ‘en-RW’, ‘en-SB’, ‘en-SC’, ‘en-SD’, ‘en-SE’, ‘en-SG’, ‘en-SH’, ‘en-SI’, ‘en-SL’, ‘en-SS’, ‘en-SX’, ‘en-SZ’, ‘en-TC’, ‘en-TK’, ‘en-TO’, ‘en-TT’, ‘en-TV’, ‘en-TZ’, ‘en-UG’, ‘en-UM’, ‘en-VC’, ‘en-VG’, ‘en-VI’, ‘en-VU’, ‘en-WS’, ‘en-ZA’, ‘en-ZM’, ‘en-ZW’

zh

zh-Hans

‘zh-Hans-HK’, ‘zh-Hans-MO’, ‘zh-Hans-SG’

hi

es

‘es-419’, ‘es-AR’, ‘es-BO’, ‘es-BR’, ‘es-BZ’, ‘es-CL’, ‘es-CO’, ‘es-CR’, ‘es-CU’, ‘es-DO’, ‘es-EA’, ‘es-EC’, ‘es-GQ’, ‘es-GT’, ‘es-HN’, ‘es-IC’, ‘es-MX’, ‘es-NI’, ‘es-PA’, ‘es-PE’, ‘es-PH’, ‘es-PR’, ‘es-PY’, ‘es-SV’, ‘es-US’, ‘es-UY’, ‘es-VE’

ar

‘ar-AE’, ‘ar-BH’, ‘ar-DJ’, ‘ar-DZ’, ‘ar-EG’, ‘ar-EH’, ‘ar-ER’, ‘ar-IL’, ‘ar-IQ’, ‘ar-JO’, ‘ar-KM’, ‘ar-KW’, ‘ar-LB’, ‘ar-LY’, ‘ar-MA’, ‘ar-MR’, ‘ar-OM’, ‘ar-PS’, ‘ar-QA’, ‘ar-SA’, ‘ar-SD’, ‘ar-SO’, ‘ar-SS’, ‘ar-SY’, ‘ar-TD’, ‘ar-TN’, ‘ar-YE’

bn

‘bn-IN’

fr

‘fr-BE’, ‘fr-BF’, ‘fr-BI’, ‘fr-BJ’, ‘fr-BL’, ‘fr-CA’, ‘fr-CD’, ‘fr-CF’, ‘fr-CG’, ‘fr-CH’, ‘fr-CI’, ‘fr-CM’, ‘fr-DJ’, ‘fr-DZ’, ‘fr-GA’, ‘fr-GF’, ‘fr-GN’, ‘fr-GP’, ‘fr-GQ’, ‘fr-HT’, ‘fr-KM’, ‘fr-LU’, ‘fr-MA’, ‘fr-MC’, ‘fr-MF’, ‘fr-MG’, ‘fr-ML’, ‘fr-MQ’, ‘fr-MR’, ‘fr-MU’, ‘fr-NC’, ‘fr-NE’, ‘fr-PF’, ‘fr-PM’, ‘fr-RE’, ‘fr-RW’, ‘fr-SC’, ‘fr-SN’, ‘fr-SY’, ‘fr-TD’, ‘fr-TG’, ‘fr-TN’, ‘fr-VU’, ‘fr-WF’, ‘fr-YT’

ur

‘ur-IN’

pt

‘pt-AO’, ‘pt-CH’, ‘pt-CV’, ‘pt-GQ’, ‘pt-GW’, ‘pt-LU’, ‘pt-MO’, ‘pt-MZ’, ‘pt-PT’, ‘pt-ST’, ‘pt-TL’

ru

‘ru-BY’, ‘ru-KG’, ‘ru-KZ’, ‘ru-MD’, ‘ru-UA’

id

sw

‘sw-CD’, ‘sw-KE’, ‘sw-UG’

pa-Arab

de

‘de-AT’, ‘de-BE’, ‘de-CH’, ‘de-IT’, ‘de-LI’, ‘de-LU’

ja

te

mr

vi

fa

‘fa-AF’

ta

‘ta-LK’, ‘ta-MY’, ‘ta-SG’

tr

‘tr-CY’

yue

ko

‘ko-KP’

it

‘it-CH’, ‘it-SM’, ‘it-VA’

fil

gu

th

kn

ps

zh-Hant

‘zh-Hant-HK’, ‘zh-Hant-MO’

ml

or

pl

my

pa

pa-Guru

am

om

‘om-KE’

ha

‘ha-GH’, ‘ha-NE’

nl

‘nl-AW’, ‘nl-BE’, ‘nl-BQ’, ‘nl-CW’, ‘nl-SR’, ‘nl-SX’

uk

uz

uz-Latn

yo

‘yo-BJ’

ms

‘ms-BN’, ‘ms-SG’

ig

ro

‘ro-MD’

mg

ne

‘ne-IN’

as

so

‘so-DJ’, ‘so-ET’, ‘so-KE’

si

km

zu

cs

sv

‘sv-AX’, ‘sv-FI’

hu

el

‘el-CY’

sn

kk

rw

ckb

‘ckb-IR’

qu

‘qu-BO’, ‘qu-EC’

ak

be

ti

‘ti-ER’

az

az-Latn

af

‘af-NA’

ca

‘ca-AD’, ‘ca-FR’, ‘ca-IT’

sr-Latn

‘sr-Latn-BA’, ‘sr-Latn-ME’, ‘sr-Latn-XK’

ii

he

bg

bm

ki

gsw

‘gsw-FR’, ‘gsw-LI’

sr

sr-Cyrl

‘sr-Cyrl-BA’, ‘sr-Cyrl-ME’, ‘sr-Cyrl-XK’

ug

zgh

ff

‘ff-CM’, ‘ff-GN’, ‘ff-MR’

rn

da

‘da-GL’

hr

‘hr-BA’

sq

‘sq-MK’, ‘sq-XK’

sk

fi

ks

hy

nb

‘nb-SJ’

luy

lg

lo

bem

kok

luo

uz-Cyrl

ka

ee

‘ee-TG’

mzn

bs-Cyrl

bs

bs-Latn

kln

kam

gl

tzm

dje

kab

bo

‘bo-IN’

shi-Latn

shi

shi-Tfng

mn

ln

‘ln-AO’, ‘ln-CF’, ‘ln-CG’

ky

sg

lt

nyn

guz

cgg

xog

lrc

‘lrc-IQ’

mer

lu

sl

teo

‘teo-KE’

brx

nd

mk

uz-Arab

mas

‘mas-TZ’

nn

kde

mfe

lv

seh

mgh

az-Cyrl

ga

eu

yi

ce

et

ksb

bez

ewo

fy

ebu

nus

ast

asa

ses

os

‘os-RU’

br

cy

kea

lag

sah

mt

vun

rof

jmc

lb

dav

dyo

dz

nnh

is

khq

bas

naq

mua

ksh

saq

se

‘se-FI’, ‘se-SE’

dua

rwk

mgo

sbp

to

jgo

ksf

fo

‘fo-DK’

gd

kl

rm

fur

agq

haw

chr

hsb

wae

nmg

lkt

twq

dsb

yav

kw

gv

smn

eo

tl

Supported Calendars

  • Gregorian calendar.

  • Persian Jalali calendar. For more information, refer to Persian Jalali Calendar.

  • Hijri/Islamic Calendar. For more information, refer to Hijri Calendar.

    >>> from dateparser.calendars.jalali import JalaliCalendar
    >>> JalaliCalendar(u'جمعه سی ام اسفند ۱۳۸۷').get_date()
    {'date_obj': datetime.datetime(2009, 3, 20, 0, 0), 'period': 'day'}
    
    >>> from dateparser.calendars.hijri import HijriCalendar
    >>> HijriCalendar(u'17-01-1437 هـ 08:30 مساءً').get_date()
    {'date_obj': datetime.datetime(2015, 10, 30, 20, 30), 'period': 'day'}
    

Install using following command to use calendars.

History

0.7.4 (2020-03-06)

Improvements:

  • Fixed Python 2.7 tests

0.7.3 (2020-03-06)

New features:

Improvements:

0.7.2 (2019-09-17)

Features:

  • Extended Czech support

  • Added time to valid periods

  • Added timezone information to dates found with search_dates()

  • Support strings as date formats

Improvements:

  • Fixed Collections ABCs depreciation warning

  • Fixed dates with trailing colons not being parsed

  • Fixed date format override on any settings change

  • Fixed parsing current weekday as past date, regardless of settings

  • Added UTC -2:30 as a valid offset

  • Added Python 3.7 to supported versions, dropped support for Python 3.3 and 3.4

  • Moved to importlib from imp where possible

  • Improved support for Catalan

  • Documentation improvements

0.7.1 (2019-02-12)

Features/news:

  • Added detected language to return value of search_dates()

  • Performance improvements

  • Refreshed versions of dependencies

Improvements:

  • Fixed unpickleable DateTime objects with timezones

  • Fixed regex pattern to avoid new behaviour of re.split in Python 3.7

  • Fixed an exception thrown when parsing colons

  • Fixed tests failing on days with number greater than 30

  • Fixed ZeroDivisionError exceptions

0.7.0 (2018-02-08)

Features added during Google Summer of Code 2017:

  • Harvesting language data from Unicode CLDR database (https://github.com/unicode-cldr/cldr-json), which includes over 200 locales (#321) - authored by Sarthak Maddan. See full currently supported locale list in README.

  • Extracting dates from longer strings of text (#324) - authored by Elena Zakharova. Special thanks for their awesome contributions!

New features:

  • Added (independently from CLDR) Georgian (#308) and Swedish (#305)

Improvements:

  • Improved support of Chinese (#359), Thai (#345), French (#301, #304), Russian (#302)

  • Removed ruamel.yaml from dependencies (#374). This should reduce the number of installation issues and improve performance as the result of moving away from YAML as basic data storage format. Note that YAML is still used as format for support language files.

  • Improved performance through using pre-compiling frequent regexes and lazy loading of data (#293, #294, #295, #315)

  • Extended tests (#316, #317, #318, #323)

  • Updated nose_parameterized to its current package, parameterized (#381)

Planned for next release:

  • Full language and locale names

  • Performance and stability improvements

  • Documentation improvements

0.6.0 (2017-03-13)

New features:

  • Consistent parsing in terms of true python representation of date string. See #281

  • Added support for Bangla, Bulgarian and Hindi languages.

Improvements:

  • Major bug fixes related to parser and system’s locale. See #277, #282

  • Type check for timezone arguments in settings. see #267

  • Pinned dependencies’ versions in requirements. See #265

  • Improved support for cn, es, dutch languages. See #274, #272, #285

Packaging:

  • Make calendars extras to be used at the time of installation if need to use calendars feature.

0.5.1 (2016-12-18)

New features:

  • Added support for Hebrew

Improvements:

  • Safer loading of YAML. See #251

  • Better timezone parsing for freshness dates. See #256

  • Pinned dependencies’ versions in requirements. See #265

  • Improved support for zh, fi languages. See #249, #250, #248, #244

0.5.0 (2016-09-26)

New features:

  • DateDataParser now also returns detected language in the result dictionary.

  • Explicit and lucid timezone conversion for a given datestring using TIMEZONE, TO_TIMEZONE settings.

  • Added Hungarian language.

  • Added setting, STRICT_PARSING to ignore incomplete dates.

Improvements:

  • Fixed quite a few parser bugs reported in issues #219, #222, #207, #224.

  • Improved support for chinese language.

  • Consistent interface for both Jalali and Hijri parsers.

0.4.0 (2016-06-17)

New features:

  • Support for Language based date order preference while parsing ambiguous dates.

  • Support for parsing dates with no spaces in between components.

  • Support for custom date order preference using settings.

  • Support for parsing generic relative dates in future.e.g. tomorrow, in two weeks, etc.

  • Added RELATIVE_BASE settings to set date context to any datetime in past or future.

  • Replaced dateutil.parser.parse with dateparser’s own parser.

Improvements:

  • Added simplifications for 12 noon and 12 midnight.

  • Fixed several bugs

  • Replaced PyYAML library by its active fork ruamel.yaml which also fixed the issues with installation on windows using python35.

  • More predictable date_formats handling.

0.3.5 (2016-04-27)

New features:

  • Danish language support.

  • Japanese language support.

  • Support for parsing date strings with accents.

Improvements:

  • Transformed languages.yaml into base file and separate files for each language.

  • Fixed vietnamese language simplifications.

  • No more version restrictions for python-dateutil.

  • Timezone parsing improvements.

  • Fixed test environments.

  • Cleaned language codes. Now we strictly follow codes as in ISO 639-1.

  • Improved chinese dates parsing.

0.3.4 (2016-03-03)

Improvements:

  • Fixed broken version 0.3.3 by excluding latest python-dateutil version.

0.3.3 (2016-02-29)

New features:

  • Finnish language support.

Improvements:

  • Faster parsing with switching to regex module.

  • RETURN_AS_TIMEZONE_AWARE setting to return tz aware date object.

  • Fixed conflicts with month/weekday names similarity across languages.

0.3.2 (2016-01-25)

New features:

  • Added Hijri Calendar support.

  • Added settings for better control over parsing dates.

  • Support to convert parsed time to the given timezone for both complete and relative dates.

Improvements:

  • Fixed problem with caching datetime.now in FreshnessDateDataParser.

  • Added month names and week day names abbreviations to several languages.

  • More simplifications for Russian and Ukrainian languages.

  • Fixed problem with parsing time component of date strings with several kinds of apostrophes.

0.3.1 (2015-10-28)

New features:

  • Support for Jalali Calendar.

  • Belarusian language support.

  • Indonesian language support.

Improvements:

  • Extended support for Russian and Polish.

  • Fixed bug with time zone recognition.

  • Fixed bug with incorrect translation of “second” for Portuguese.

0.3.0 (2015-07-29)

New features:

  • Compatibility with Python 3 and PyPy.

Improvements:

  • languages.yaml data cleaned up to make it human-readable.

  • Improved Spanish date parsing.

0.2.1 (2015-07-13)

  • Support for generic parsing of dates with UTC offset.

  • Support for Tagalog/Filipino dates.

  • Improved support for French and Spanish dates.

0.2.0 (2015-06-17)

  • Easy to use parse function

  • Languages definitions using YAML.

  • Using translation based approach for parsing non-english languages. Previously, dateutil.parserinfo was used for language definitions.

  • Better period extraction.

  • Improved tests.

  • Added a number of new simplifications for more comprehensive generic parsing.

  • Improved validation for dates.

  • Support for Polish, Thai and Arabic dates.

  • Support for pytz timezones.

  • Fixed building and packaging issues.

0.1.0 (2014-11-24)

  • First release on PyPI.

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