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- Difference between System. DateTime. Now and System. DateTime. Today
The DateTime Now property returns the current date and time, for example 2011-07-01 10:09 45310 The DateTime Today property returns the current date with the time compnents set to zero, for example 2011-07-01 00:00 00000
- How to initialize a JavaScript Date to a particular time zone
Now we can construct a new Date, properly (i e internally it will have the correct UTC date time), using the timezone offset string
- Getting todays date in YYYY-MM-DD in Python? - Stack Overflow
Yet another date parser library: Pendulum This one's good, I promise If you're working with pendulum, there are some interesting choices You can get the current timestamp using now() or today's date using today()
- . net - DateTime. Now vs. DateTime. UtcNow - Stack Overflow
DateTime Now gives the date and time as it would appear to someone in your current locale I'd recommend using DateTime Now whenever you're displaying a date to a human being - that way they're comfortable with the value they see - it's something that they can easily compare to what they see on their watch or clock
- How do I make Git forget about a file that was tracked, but is now in . . .
I put a file that was previously being tracked by Git onto the gitignore list However, the file still shows up in git status after it is edited How do I force Git to completely forget the file?
- tar: Error is not recoverable: exiting now - Stack Overflow
The problem is that you do not have bzip2 installed The tar program relies upon this external program to do compression For installing bzip2, it depends on the system you are using For example, with Ubuntu that would be on Ubuntu sudo apt-get install bzip2 The GNU tar program does not know how to compress an existing file such as user-logs tar (bzip2 does that) The tar program can use
- add a now timestamp column to a pandas df - Stack Overflow
You can use datetime's now method to create the time stamp and either assign this to a new column like: s3['new_col'] = dt datetime now() or assign direct to the index:
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