Typed and DST-safe datetimes for Python, available in Rust or pure Python.
Do you cross your fingers every time you work with Python's datetime—hoping that you didn't mix naive and aware? or that you avoided its other pitfalls? There’s no way to be sure...
✨ Until now! ✨
Whenever helps you write correct and type checked datetime code, using well-established concepts from modern libraries in other languages. It's also way faster than other third-party libraries—and usually the standard library as well. If performance isn't your top priority, a pure Python version is available as well.
RFC3339-parse, normalize, compare to now, shift, and change timezone (1M times)
📖 Docs | 🐍 PyPI | 🐙 GitHub | 🚀 Changelog | ❓ FAQ | 🗺️ Roadmap | 💬 Issues & feedback
⚠️ Note: A 1.0 release is coming soon. Until then, the API may change as we gather feedback and improve the library. Leave a ⭐️ on GitHub if you'd like to see how this project develops!
Over 20+ years, Python's datetime
has grown
out of step with what you'd expect from a modern datetime library.
Two points stand out:
-
It doesn't always account for Daylight Saving Time (DST). Here is a simple example:
bedtime = datetime(2023, 3, 25, 22, tzinfo=ZoneInfo("Europe/Paris")) full_rest = bedtime + timedelta(hours=8) # It returns 6am, but should be 7am—because we skipped an hour due to DST!
Note this isn't a bug, but a design decision that DST is only considered when calculations involve two timezones. If you think this is surprising, you are not alone.
-
Typing can't distinguish between naive and aware datetimes. Your code probably only works with one or the other, but there's no way to enforce this in the type system!
# Does this expect naive or aware? Can't tell! def schedule_meeting(at: datetime) -> None: ...
There are two other popular third-party libraries, but they don't (fully) address these issues. Here's how they compare to whenever and the standard library:
Whenever | datetime | Arrow | Pendulum | |
---|---|---|---|---|
DST-safe | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | |
Typed aware/naive | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
Fast | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
Arrow
is probably the most historically popular 3rd party datetime library.
It attempts to provide a more "friendly" API than the standard library,
but doesn't address the core issues:
it keeps the same footguns, and its decision to reduce the number
of types to just one (arrow.Arrow
) means that it's even harder
for typecheckers to catch mistakes.
Pendulum arrived on the scene in 2016, promising better DST-handling, as well as improved performance. However, it only fixes some DST-related pitfalls, and its performance has significantly degraded over time. Additionally, it's in maintenance limbo with only one release in the last four years, and many issues remaining unaddressed.
- 🌐 DST-safe arithmetic
- 🛡️ Typesafe API prevents common bugs
- ✅ Fixes issues arrow/pendulum don't
- ⚖️ Based on proven and familiar concepts
- ⚡️ Unmatched performance
- 💎 Thoroughly tested and documented
- 📆 Support for date arithmetic
- ⏱️ Nanosecond precision
- 🦀 Rust!—but with a pure-Python option
- 🚀 Support for the latest GIL-related improvements (experimental)
>>> from whenever import (
... # Explicit types for different use cases
... Instant,
... ZonedDateTime,
... LocalDateTime,
... )
# Identify moments in time, without timezone/calendar complexity
>>> now = Instant.now()
Instant(2024-07-04 10:36:56Z)
# Simple, explicit conversions
>>> now.to_tz("Europe/Paris")
ZonedDateTime(2024-07-04 12:36:56+02:00[Europe/Paris])
# A 'naive' local time can't accidentally mix with other types.
# You need to explicitly convert it and handle ambiguity.
>>> party_invite = LocalDateTime(2023, 10, 28, hour=22)
>>> party_invite.add(hours=6)
Traceback (most recent call last):
ImplicitlyIgnoringDST: Adjusting a local datetime implicitly ignores DST [...]
>>> party_starts = party_invite.assume_tz("Europe/Amsterdam")
ZonedDateTime(2023-10-28 22:00:00+02:00[Europe/Amsterdam])
# DST-safe arithmetic
>>> party_starts.add(hours=6)
ZonedDateTime(2022-10-29 03:00:00+01:00[Europe/Amsterdam])
# Comparison and equality
>>> now > party_starts
True
# Formatting & parsing common formats (ISO8601, RFC3339, RFC2822)
>>> now.format_rfc2822()
"Thu, 04 Jul 2024 10:36:56 GMT"
# If you must: you can convert to/from the standard lib
>>> now.py_datetime()
datetime.datetime(2024, 7, 4, 10, 36, 56, tzinfo=datetime.timezone.utc)
Read more in the feature overview or API reference.
-
🧪 0.x: get to feature-parity, process feedback, and tweak the API:
- ✅ Datetime classes
- ✅ Deltas
- ✅ Date and time of day (separate from datetime)
- ✅ Implement Rust extension for performance
- 🚧 Tweaks to the delta API
-
🔒 1.0: API stability and backwards compatibility
- 🚧 Customizable parsing and formatting
- 🚧 Intervals
- 🚧 Ranges and recurring times
- 🚧 Parsing leap seconds
- Supports the proleptic Gregorian calendar between 1 and 9999 AD
- Timezone offsets are limited to whole seconds (consistent with IANA TZ DB)
- No support for leap seconds (consistent with industry standards and other modern libraries)
Whenever follows semantic versioning. Until the 1.0 version, the API may change with minor releases. Breaking changes will be meticulously explained in the changelog. Since the API is fully typed, your typechecker and/or IDE will help you adjust to any API changes.
⚠️ Note: until 1.x, pickled objects may not be unpicklable across versions. After 1.0, backwards compatibility of pickles will be maintained as much as possible.
Whenever is licensed under the MIT License. The binary wheels contain Rust dependencies which are licensed under similarly permissive licenses (MIT, Apache-2.0, and others). For more details, see the licenses included in the distribution.
This project is inspired by—and borrows concepts from—the following projects. Check them out!
The benchmark comparison graph is based on the one from the Ruff project.
For timezone data, Whenever uses Python's own zoneinfo
module.