Django: Use of DATE_FORMAT, DATETIME_FORMAT, TIME_FORMAT in settings.py?

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情歌与酒
情歌与酒 2020-12-17 10:27

I would like to globally (through my entire site, admin and front-end) adjust the way dates and time are displayed to my likings, but I cannot figure out what is going on wi

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  • 2020-12-17 10:27

    A late response, but hopefully this will help anyone else searching for this. By setting USE_L10N = True in your settings, Django looks for locale specific formats, giving them precedence over non-locale related settings.

    The solution: (to display 30/12/2017 on a DateField)

    from django.conf.locale.en import formats as en_formats
    
    en_formats.DATE_FORMAT = "%d/%m/%Y"
    

    and for inputs (to accept 30/12/2017 or 30-12-2017)

    en_formats.DATE_INPUT_FORMATS = ['%d/%m/%Y', '%d-%m-%Y']
    

    Reference: https://mounirmesselmeni.github.io/2014/11/06/date-format-in-django-admin/

    *tested on Django==1.10.7

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  • 2020-12-17 10:42

    Searching through the source shows that DATETIME_FORMAT, etc., are only used when django.utils.formats.localize() is called, and that only seems to be called when django.template.VariableNodes are rendered.

    I'm not sure when exactly VariableNodes are used in template rendering, but I would guess that if you have settings.USE_L10N turned on and you have a VariableNode, it will be localized.

    localize looks like this:

    def localize(value):
        """
        Checks if value is a localizable type (date, number...) and returns it
        formatted as a string using current locale format
        """
        if settings.USE_L10N:
            if isinstance(value, (decimal.Decimal, float, int)):
                return number_format(value)
            elif isinstance(value, datetime.datetime):
                return date_format(value, 'DATETIME_FORMAT')
            elif isinstance(value, datetime.date):
                return date_format(value)
            elif isinstance(value, datetime.time):
                return time_format(value, 'TIME_FORMAT')
        return value
    

    To answer your question, I'd probably write a quick context processor that called localize() on everything in the context.

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  • 2020-12-17 10:45

    Had same problem, solution is simple and documented. Whenever you render a date, you need to specify you want the template to render it as a date/time/short_date/datetime (e.g., {{ some_date_var | date }} and then it will render it as specified with DATE_FORMAT in your settings.py

    Example:

    >>> from django.conf import settings  # imported to show my variables in settings.py 
    >>> settings.DATE_FORMAT #  - showing my values; I modified this value
    'm/d/Y'
    >>> settings.TIME_FORMAT
    'P'
    >>> settings.DATETIME_FORMAT
    'N j, Y, P'
    >>> from django.template import Template, Context
    >>> from datetime import datetime
    >>> c = Context(dict(moon = datetime(1969, 7, 20, 20, 17, 39))) # Create context with datetime to render in a template
    >>> print c['moon'] # This is the default format of a printing datetime object 
    1969-07-20 20:17:39
    >>> print Template("default formatting : {{ moon }}\n"
                       "use DATE_FORMAT : {{ moon|date }}\n"
                       "use TIME_FORMAT : {{ moon|time }}\n"
                       "use DATETIME_FORMAT: {{ moon|date:'DATETIME_FORMAT' }}\n"
                       "use SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT: {{ moon|date:'SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT' }}"
                       ).render(c)
    default formatting : 1969-07-20 20:17:39
    use DATE_FORMAT : 07/20/1969
    use TIME_FORMAT : 8:17 p.m.
    use DATETIME_FORMAT: July 20, 1969, 8:17 p.m.
    use SHORT_DATETIME_FORMAT: 07/20/1969 8:17 p.m.
    

    This makes sense; e.g., the template needs to know whether it should use the DATE_FORMAT or the SHORT_DATE_FORMAT or whatever.

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  • 2020-12-17 10:53

    You can override DATE_FORMAT, DATETIME_FORMAT, TIME_FORMAT and other date/time formats when USE_L10N = True by creating custom format files as described in Django documentation.

    In summary:

    1. Set FORMAT_MODULE_PATH = 'yourproject.formats' in settings.py
    2. Create directory structure yourproject/formats/en (replacing en with the corresponding ISO 639-1 locale code if you are using other locale than English) and add __init__.py files to all directories to make it a valid Python module
    3. Add formats.py to the leaf directory, containing the format definitions you want to override, e.g. DATE_FORMAT = 'j. F Y'.

    Example from an actual project here.

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