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I am trying to time a running function Find if 24 hrs have passed between datetimes. But i need to know how many hours/minutes/seconds does it takes

I am using time.time(), but i don't understand the output Time_difference_in_minutes = time_difference.total_seconds() / 60 if a, b are naive datetime objects such as returned by datetime.now() then the result may be wrong if the objects represent local time with different utc offsets e.g., around dst transitions or for past/future dates How can i convert this output in.

556 how do i get the current time in python

The time module the time module provides functions that tell us the time in seconds since the epoch as well as other utilities. This gives the execution time in seconds Another option since python 3.3 might be to use perf_counter or process_time, depending on your requirements Before 3.3 it was recommended to use time.clock (thanks amber)

However, it is currently deprecated On unix, return the current processor time as a floating point number expressed in seconds. The choice between time.time() and time.perf_counter() depends on the context in which you will use the function That's because each function deals with a different type of time

It's measured from a fixed point in the past

According to the docs, time.time() returns (.) the time in seconds. Did you happen to name a file time.py (or a folder containing python modules time) Both approaches work ok in power bi desktop report, however once i published to power bi service and after several refreshes (initially it was nz time), the time turn back to utc time

I don't want to create extra columns in dax and really want to try use power query Is there any way to work it out? The command git diff outputs a similar message lf will be replaced by crlf the next time git touches it for each file The message is sent to stderr, so to supress the message use git diff 2>/dev/null

Therefore the first time you run your method,.net jit's it first

The time it takes to do this is added to the time of the execution Equally, other factors will also cause the execution time to vary What you should really be looking for absolute accuracy is performance profiling Take a look at the following:

I am trying to figure out the differences between the datetime and time modules, and what each should be used for I know that datetime provides both dates and time What is the use of the time m.

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