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Home/ Questions/Q 274693
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T00:38:57+00:00 2026-05-12T00:38:57+00:00

I understand that seconds and microseconds are probably represented separately in datetime.timedelta for efficiency

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I understand that seconds and microseconds are probably represented separately in datetime.timedelta for efficiency reasons, but I just wrote this simple function:

def to_seconds_float(timedelta):
    """Calculate floating point representation of combined
    seconds/microseconds attributes in :param:`timedelta`.

    :raise ValueError: If :param:`timedelta.days` is truthy.

        >>> to_seconds_float(datetime.timedelta(seconds=1, milliseconds=500))
        1.5
        >>> too_big = datetime.timedelta(days=1, seconds=12)
        >>> to_seconds_float(too_big) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
        Traceback (most recent call last):
        ...
        ValueError: ('Must not have days', datetime.timedelta(1, 12))
    """
    if timedelta.days:
        raise ValueError('Must not have days', timedelta)
    return timedelta.seconds + timedelta.microseconds / 1E6

This is useful for things like passing a value to time.sleep or select.select. Why isn’t something like this part of the datetime.timedelta interface? I may be missing some corner case. Time representation seems to have so many non-obvious corner cases…

I rejected days right out to have a reasonable shot at some precision (I’m too lazy to actually work out the math ATM, so this seems like a reasonable compromise ;-).

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T00:38:57+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 12:38 am

    A Python float has about 15 significant digits, so with seconds being up to 86400 (5 digits to the left of the decimal point) and microseconds needing 6 digits, you could well include the days (up to several years’ worth) without loss of precision.

    A good mantra is “pi seconds is a nanocentury” — about 3.14E9 seconds per 100 years, i.e. 3E7 per year, so 3E13 microseconds per year. The mantra is good because it’s memorable, even though it does require you to do a little mental arithmetic afterwards (but, like spinach, it’s GOOD for you — keeps you nimble and alert!-).

    The design philosophy of datetime is somewhat minimalist, so it’s not surprising it omits many possible helper methods that boil down to simple arithmetic expressions.

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